Desert Sasqwatch
Bigfoot Goblin
- Desert Sasqwatch Bigfoot Goblin
Have you contacted QA1 to ask if this is normal? I would be asking questions about this, as these bearings have been inserted by most everyone successfully. 
Wow, it just shouldn't be that tight. Any burs showing on the other side? I believe I put mine together with a small wooden mallet.
Have you contacted QA1 to ask if this is normal? I would be asking questions about this, as these bearings have been inserted by most everyone successfully.![]()
You may have mismatched set for your shocks, SAE on one side and metric on the other? The bearing races shouldn't have much more than approximately 0.005 inch interference fit into the shock eyes.I was going to call on Monday when they are open. I've not seen anything anywhere on our forum to suggest this should be a problem, so I was very surprised when mine turned out to be such an issue.
What did you use to freeze it? Freezer, dry ice, liquid nitrogen?
I would push it back out and see if it is digging into the sides anywhere.
Everyone of those that I have put in lately have gone in easiest with a heat gun on the shock end to warm it a little and then a gentle finesse.
We use dry ice and nitrogen at work. For home I use dry ice from Kroger or similar. Works great. I've never had good luck with the freezer
Sandpaper wrapped around a drill bit... Sand/polish/scrape some material away. Measure, repeat until it isn't soooooo tight.
Absolutely true. The parts should fit. I'm usually to impatient to wait.
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This was my experience as well. I have assembled two sets of these coilovers for the front of my build (used a longer damper for more ground clearance with 15" wheels), and the only tool I used for installing these bearings was the snap ring pliers.All of the QA1s that I have assembled have been a slip fit.
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New video by Lonny Doyle
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