SirRobyn0
Full Access Member
- Joined
- Dec 6, 2019
- Posts
- 6,755
- Reaction score
- 11,402
- Location
- In the woods in Western Washington
- First Name
- Rob
- Truck Year
- 1984
- Truck Model
- C20
- Engine Size
- 305
If it's sat and your thinking that the shoes are stuck to the drum, and since your going to need to replace those shoes before it goes back on the road, it would be perfectly fine to shoot penitrating oil on to the shoes though the inspection holes, around the edge from the inside whatever. Or you could try heating up the drum. On the farm we have an extremely old trailer, we think the axle is out of a model T. It doesn't get use often and it's not licenced, so it'll do task jobs. Last year we had extra hay piled up in it. It really likes to stick the shoes to the drum. I can't remember why off hand we don't remove the shoes and leave it that way, but what I do is take the wheel off, get my 6 foot pry bar jammed between the lugs and get someone the stand on it. Then I hit the drum with a hammer. Works everytime
In your case if the drum won't turn and you think the rear end is to blame of course you can take the bolts off the axle and the drum should turn.
Hopefully this we be more helpful than my initial post. Sorry about misunderstanding your initial post. As you don't have very many post on the site we don't know your skill level and assumed you were trying to remove the drum, not free it to roll. Sorry about that.
In your case if the drum won't turn and you think the rear end is to blame of course you can take the bolts off the axle and the drum should turn.
Hopefully this we be more helpful than my initial post. Sorry about misunderstanding your initial post. As you don't have very many post on the site we don't know your skill level and assumed you were trying to remove the drum, not free it to roll. Sorry about that.