This Micro Mark puller is actually the NWSL "The Puller"
I ended up writing a book... sorry!
The Puller works pretty well, and can get some flywheels off. You slip the V plate behind the flywheel and then turn the
press bolt to drive the shaft out. It will likely be a 1.5mm shaft, and if it is, the smaller press bolt, which is 1/16"
will work well enough to get it out. 1.5mm is really .059" and 1/16 is .062", but for the purposes of pressing
out a shaft like this, I've found that it works. The .003" is close enough that you can press out the shaft without
enlarging the flywheel hole enough to ruin it.
The problem is that sometimes, those flywheels are so tight on those motor shafts, that even this puller
can't get that thing to budge, and the 1/16" press shaft will actually bend before it can push that shaft out.
If you put a lot of pressure on it and it still won't move, try tapping the flywheel gently but sharply with a small
metal hammer. Sometimes that quick shock will cause the shaft to "let go" and start moving out.
If the Puller can't do it.. yep... a bench vise is one way to go. You can go two ways with this, that I know of.
WEAR EYE PROTECTION.
WEAR EYE PROTECTION.WEAR EYE PROTECTION.1. You procure a strong, thin "V" plate. I bought some 1" square scraps of various thicknesses of stainless steel
from a local sheet metal shop. I used a Dremel with a diamond cutoff wheel to cut a "V" notch in it. It took a while,
even with diamond. Stainless steel is HARD. But that's the idea. Then you slip the V plate in behind the flywheel,
and hang the motor between the jaws of the vise by the V plate. Close the jaws as far as you can, with the motor
in between them, without actually clamping onto the motor. Then use a punch and a hammer to tap the shaft
out. I use old broken wire drills for this. They are hard and straight and do a good job. You can take something like
a #61 wire drill, cut off the smooth shank part with a Dremel, and use that as your punch.
Some people make V plates out of a single edge razor blade. Those things are really tough and thin.
2. If you don't care about the old flywheel, you can just clamp that thing really tight in the vise jaws and punch out the shaft.
3. If the flywheel sticks out beyond the body of the motor on either side, you can hang the motor by the flywheel itself,
with the motor hanging between the vise jaws, and punch the motor out.
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If you have a mill or drill press, this is the best way of all. Hang the motor by the V plate (you need a vise under
the drill press), put the wire drill in the drill press chuck, and then gently just lower the drill press head and push
the shaft right out. This by far the most gentle, most controlled way to do it. And for really really tough cases,
it works when nothing else will. You can let just a little nub of that wire drill stick out of the drill press chuck,
and locate it exactly into the center of the motor shaft, giving a nice firm push. It can put incredible, controlled pressure
on the shaft without snapping off the drill bit punch. Some Trix motor worm gears are so nasty I do them this way.