Bimmer Nut Ed
11-23-2004, 06:26 PM
I had replaced one thrust arm on my daughters 535, and I just decided to do the other now, since I already had the part. I hesitated, remembering how hard it was to get the ball joint off with a pickle fork on my own 535.
I think I figured out how to make the job super easy. This is the second time I tried it, and it worked like a charm both times so I thought I'd share it with you all. Might not be a new idea, but it's new to me.
First off, take the nut off the bottom of the ball joint, all the way (take it off all the way just to make sure the threads are clean so that after you release the joint, you can still unscrew it easily enough), then put it back on, just far enough so the nut is all the way on but only so far so the bolt end is flush with the top of the nut. You know what I mean, essentiall just screw it back on about 1/2 inch. This is what you beat on with a hammer. No need for pickle fork at all. But the trick is, take your floor jack and a short 2x4 (about a foot long), and lift up on the thrust arm itself (use the 2.4 on end). Don't put too much pressure on it as to lift the car, but "just enough" to keep constant good pressure. It only takes a couple whacks, and off it comes.
Hope it helps.
I think I figured out how to make the job super easy. This is the second time I tried it, and it worked like a charm both times so I thought I'd share it with you all. Might not be a new idea, but it's new to me.
First off, take the nut off the bottom of the ball joint, all the way (take it off all the way just to make sure the threads are clean so that after you release the joint, you can still unscrew it easily enough), then put it back on, just far enough so the nut is all the way on but only so far so the bolt end is flush with the top of the nut. You know what I mean, essentiall just screw it back on about 1/2 inch. This is what you beat on with a hammer. No need for pickle fork at all. But the trick is, take your floor jack and a short 2x4 (about a foot long), and lift up on the thrust arm itself (use the 2.4 on end). Don't put too much pressure on it as to lift the car, but "just enough" to keep constant good pressure. It only takes a couple whacks, and off it comes.
Hope it helps.