Best brand? Source?
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Hadn't compared prices in many years. Even amongst shops I've found some places are cheaper than others.Only issue with going the bearing store route is you will pay a LOT more than something like All Balls.
I was looking at All Balls kits on eBay.
Side note: Is Bikebandit a good bet for new cush drive dampers?
Unfortunately it is hard to find a USA supplier. I thought Timken was USA but all the bearings I saw were made in France. All Balls are made in China, possibly now Korea, but they are supposedly designed in the US.
I can't say they're standard for all manufacturers, but what codes I recognise on this document seem to chime well enough with the ones I do know. DU is 'sealed on one side', Z is 'shield on one side'.Dave, that is fantastic info. Here's a question. I notice different letter designations after the numbers on the rear bearings. DU on the one side, which is an NSK, and Z on the other side, which is a Koyo. I am guessing that these were replaced at the same time and wonder what those designations mean.
Timken's headquarters are in Canton, OH. I believe that it manufactures in several countries.
Just as a heads-up for those who want to know a little bit of the balls (and rollers).
For a year or two I worked in a plant making the balls. Now, prior to that, I'd used many makes of ball bearings over the years and knew some were better than others, obviously.
It still came as somewhat of a surprise to find the somewhat loose tolerances were acceptable enough for some makers, but no real surprise to find the tighter tolerances that were only just good enough for some others.
The toughest ones of the lot were Koyo - we really had to pull out the stops to meet their requirements and everything had to be absolutely spot-on to produce balls that were acceptable enough for them.
We made balls for Timken, SKF, RHP, F_A_G, Koyo, NTN, and a few others. The worst ones were for a French bearing maker which supplied Renault. Funnily enough, some of the Renault models at the time had a chronic gearbox bearing problem - caused by under-specified bearings. Nothing to do with us, we just made and supplied what we were asked to do.....
There's a kind of circle taking shape there. A friend of mine's father was an ex-Wehrmacht PoW, who'd been a tank mechanic on the Eastern Front, and was captured by the Allies in the West, in the latter part of the war. His home town was originally Schweinfurt and post war, he stayed on in Scotland. A very gifted engineer, he created a career in heavy machinery until his retirement.As an aside, I once met another former ball bearing maker, during a 1991 stay in Germany. He worked in the Schweinfurt bearing plant as a teen, during the massive Allied attempt to destroy the factory from the air. Later, he was sent to other countries to help get new bearing factories running.