If it is a row crop,row crop utility, or special row crop then you have a single nut in the center of the casting. This is holding the casting onto the axle. This is a tapered fit.
I have a heavy piece of flat steel that I have holes drilled in that match the wheel weight mounting holes on the castings. I remove the nut from the center casting. I then put the flat steel across the end of the axle with bolts through the weight holes in the casting. Tighten the bolts up but not too tight as you can break the casting. Take a heavy sledge hammer and hit the flat steel right over the axle. That usually will break the casting loose from the axle.
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Today's Featured Article - Upgrading an Oliver Super 55 Electrical System - by Dennis Hawkins. My old Oliver Super 55 has been just sitting and rusting for several years now. I really hate to see a good tractor being treated that way, but not being able to start it without a 30 minute point filing ritual every time contributed to its demise. If it would just start when I turn the key, then I would use it more often. In addition to a bad case of old age, most of the tractor's original electrical system was simply too unreliable to keep. The main focus of this page is to show how I upgr
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