My passenger side output shaft seal has been leaking and I'm in the process of replacing it. My mechanical abilities are okay but have never gotten involved with pressing seals in and out and I'm a bit apprehensive. The transaxle is a 5 speed on my 73 TCS.
I was able to press out the old seal and metal seat it sits in and am now going to put the new parts back together. This is where I'm lacking in experience. Since the nut holding all of this into the casing is unavailable, I don't want to do anything that would damage my original nut. I have a backup I got from the Renault website in case anything goes wrong, but using it would necessitate removing the transaxle from the car and doing the internal adjustments. This is what Rob Siegel(The Hack Mechanic) had to do and I would really like to avoid that effort. So I need some help and any suggestions are appreciated.
In the first picture below I have, starting with the socket and going clockwise, the socket, the new seal, the old seal and the metal seat the seal sits in. The OD of the new seal is 1 1/8" or 54.50 mm, the OD of the old seal is 1 3/16" or 52.0 mm and the ID of the metal seat is 1 1/64" or 51.7 mm. So the difference between the metal seat ID and the new seal OD is 2.80 mm. My thought is to heat the metal seat in boiling water and after having greased up the OD of the seal, try to get it into the seat. I don't have any other ideas.
Second question deals with the process of putting all of this together. In the second picture, it can be seen that the socket conveniently fits neatly into the slot on the backside of the seal. So, do I press the seal into the seat first and then press both into the nut or do I press all three together at once. Seems to me that the first method is the way to go but I don't have any experience to draw upon. Could also be a third method I don't know about.
That's where I'm at and appreciate any suggestions.
Thanks!