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The half axles on LL engines are knurled. If you twist them, you risk damaging the plastic gear portion. Try using Atlas or Kato wheel sets. You will need to adjust the centering of the gear, but that is fairly easy. Use this to adjust the axle on the wheel:https://www.ebay.com/itm/Walkera-W010-Gear-Pinion-Puller-Remover-Tools-Set-For-RC-Motor-Pinion-Parts-ED/111954055561
A bit of caution. Those axles are pointed and protrude through to the outside, right? (That's what I'm seeing in the photo).When you turn the press screw up against that pointed end, you risk flattening or otherwise disfiguring it. In a plastic axle tube, the risk is not as great as in a case where you have a metal wheel hard-pressed on a metal shaft, but you still should avoid it.Put something a little softer between the ram pin and the tip of that axle when you do this. A plastic nylon washer, just inserted so some of the plastic is in between the ram and the axle point, with do the trick. You don't want to blunt that point.But otherwise, I completely agree. Do this with a wheel puller. Don't just pull and twist on axles. It's not worth the risk if you can easily get on it with a puller.
Pro-tip: use a penny as the surface to press the axle point against. The zinc in the penny is much softer than the axle steel.
Are you suggesting that you are a pro? Jon
Pete, I think you are right and are seeing the obvious that we didn't see. Plus, pulling axle out of the tube is a lot more forgiving than pressing a wheel off an axle, which is more prone to introducing wobble.The only way your idea would not work would be if you wedged the tweezers in there and the wheel "let go" and slid on its axle before the axle slid out of the tube, but I highly doubt that would happen.Folks...reread Peteski's suggestion. I think it's a better idea than pulling or wheel pressing.