I suggest contacting any motor shop.. or murrfarms.NKTBOLT wrote:Hello everyone. I am currently in the process of restoring my Thunderbolt 1000B siren, but have a problem. The bearings have gone bad and sound terrible. I dont want to take the siren apart myself because I dont want to break it. So, if anyone knows someone in the Georgia area who could do the job for me? Thanks, Nick
I may contact Ian or Jeb (Blue10AEMia)Valtonus wrote:I suggest contacting any motor shop.. or murrfarms.NKTBOLT wrote:Hello everyone. I am currently in the process of restoring my Thunderbolt 1000B siren, but have a problem. The bearings have gone bad and sound terrible. I dont want to take the siren apart myself because I dont want to break it. So, if anyone knows someone in the Georgia area who could do the job for me? Thanks, Nick
I used this video to assist my project. When you do take the chopper cap off I'd recommend not using a regular hammer to take it off. Find a copper one instead. It will help to not warp the metal. That is if the bearing doesn't come out when you take the chopper out.SoundMaster 391 wrote:Its really easy to take the bearings out. All you need is a simple bearing puller (which you can get form eBay for pretty cheap). You gotta take the entire chopper assembly out and before you remove the armature, make sure to take the brush holders out or else you can damage the brush holders/brushes. Here is a video from murrfarms of him showing how to remove bearings from a Model 2. Which is basically the same thing as a Thunderbolt chopper.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7abRQAaosk
Can't you use a mallet too?When you do take the chopper cap off I'd recommend not using a regular hammer to take it off. Find a copper one instead. It will help to not warp the metal. That is if the bearing doesn't come out when you take the chopper out.
Depends on the type of head. Copper is harder but malleable which makes it perfect to hammer pieces of metal. Instead of warping the surface it warps the head of the hammer. It's much more efficient in my opinion. And my granddad's who's been an engineer for a long time.SoundMaster 391 wrote:Can't you use a mullet too?When you do take the chopper cap off I'd recommend not using a regular hammer to take it off. Find a copper one instead. It will help to not warp the metal. That is if the bearing doesn't come out when you take the chopper out.
NK THIS is the video I was telling you about.SoundMaster 391 wrote:Its really easy to take the bearings out. All you need is a simple bearing puller (which you can get form eBay for pretty cheap). You gotta take the entire chopper assembly out and before you remove the armature, make sure to take the brush holders out or else you can damage the brush holders/brushes. Here is a video from murrfarms of him showing how to remove and install bearings from a Model 2 (which is basically the same thing as a Thunderbolt chopper).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K7abRQAaosk
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