Ok, some closing coments here.
Siren 73, You dredged up this thread after a year to insert the following comment....
Great work, I'm assuming you remebered to grease up the CV joint, otherwise it would have been a very short Road Test.
Had you instead mentioned the issue of where the CV joint is struck, you might not be considered a troll. However you have plainly proceeded to prove that's what you are.
I believe that the advice to strike the outer casting of the CV joint is outdated and very much based on earlier joint designs. I concede it would be best advice to drift the inner race off the driveshaft using a softer implement, however, the inner race is hardened steel. I'd like to bet I could drift the same inner race over the clip as above a thousand times without doing any damage..... Far, far less force needs to be applied to the drifting tool when then applied to the inner race compared with striking the outer casting of the joint.
(When refitting the CV - do you strike it at its widest part........? No. )
More often than not, garages fit new CV joints rather than reboot - are they that concerned about damaging the old joint?
So there you have it - reader's choice. try my tip - and risk damage according to siren73, or do it the advised way. (and risk damage?
) I have added a caveat to step 5 above.