Blip01
Active LVC Member
Having just today replaced one of the hub assemblies on my 2001 LS thought I'd pass on a few things. Hopefully it helps someone who is looking at this repair.
The bad bearing made a constant drone sound that varied with speed. When turning it changed to more of a growling sound. I drove on the bad bearing for a while before getting around to replacing it. I had checked both front sides a couple times and never found any play.
The hardest part was figuring out which side was bad. I was fairly certain it was one of the fronts, and from reading here and some other sites I was pretty sure it was the passenger side. Most advice indicated that if the sound grew louder when turning left then it would be the passenger side that was bad, as that is where the weight was shifting. That is how my car was acting, but it turns out it was the driver's side that was bad. It may be worth pulling the tire and brakes from each side and giving the hub a good spin before replacing anything. I replaced the passenger's side, went for a test drive and still had the noise. I then wound up putting the original passenger's side hub assembly onto the driver's side. That solved the problem.
The hub assembly is the same for each side, so if you do misdiagnose which side is bad(like I did) you can just throw the hub/bearing assembly onto the other side. I bought my new hub off of ebay for around $65.
Installation was actually much easier than I had expected. Raise the car, remove the wheel, (4) bolts for the caliper, and (4) bolts that hold the hub onto the car. A breaker bar and hammer definitely help with the hub bolts, they have some pretty stout thread lock and corrosion.
Once I got the four bolts off that hold the hub on I was surprised to see the assembly fall right off. From reading I had expected it to be fused to the car by corrosion. This wasn't the case. I've owned the car since it had 30K miles on it, and it's at 150K now. The hubs have never been removed since I've owned it, so i guess i got lucky.
If I hadn't replaced the wrong side first the entire process would have taken me about an hour or so. This is definitely a doable DIY repair!
The bad bearing made a constant drone sound that varied with speed. When turning it changed to more of a growling sound. I drove on the bad bearing for a while before getting around to replacing it. I had checked both front sides a couple times and never found any play.
The hardest part was figuring out which side was bad. I was fairly certain it was one of the fronts, and from reading here and some other sites I was pretty sure it was the passenger side. Most advice indicated that if the sound grew louder when turning left then it would be the passenger side that was bad, as that is where the weight was shifting. That is how my car was acting, but it turns out it was the driver's side that was bad. It may be worth pulling the tire and brakes from each side and giving the hub a good spin before replacing anything. I replaced the passenger's side, went for a test drive and still had the noise. I then wound up putting the original passenger's side hub assembly onto the driver's side. That solved the problem.
The hub assembly is the same for each side, so if you do misdiagnose which side is bad(like I did) you can just throw the hub/bearing assembly onto the other side. I bought my new hub off of ebay for around $65.
Installation was actually much easier than I had expected. Raise the car, remove the wheel, (4) bolts for the caliper, and (4) bolts that hold the hub onto the car. A breaker bar and hammer definitely help with the hub bolts, they have some pretty stout thread lock and corrosion.
Once I got the four bolts off that hold the hub on I was surprised to see the assembly fall right off. From reading I had expected it to be fused to the car by corrosion. This wasn't the case. I've owned the car since it had 30K miles on it, and it's at 150K now. The hubs have never been removed since I've owned it, so i guess i got lucky.
If I hadn't replaced the wrong side first the entire process would have taken me about an hour or so. This is definitely a doable DIY repair!