To prevent damaging it, beat it near the studs and center hub like you are driving it back ON the car. It will start to loosen up and bounce back at you. Using that method you can employ a drift and a really big hammer without any consequence.
This
All these crazy stuck rotor stories. All my rotors start to fall off the hub, being held only by the caliper, as soon as I take the wheel off![]()
I must admit the ingenuity of the Japanese car builders in regards to my wife's 2002 Mazda MPV van - each front rotor has a threaded hole (10 or 12mm). I don't remember exact size, but you just start threading a bolt there and it pushes the stuck rotor off. Eureka!
Have you checked yours?
I am listening....where is this thread? Is this the threaded hole that is used to hold the whole caliper assembly in its place? I would love to do something like this....my arms are so sore from hammering 3 hours straight. I think I know what you are talking about though......
That sucks. Did you try the metal hammer yet?Just looked it up, mazda 3 rotors do not have those holes.
edit:
Found this though....
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mtsTJCRljAs
I was thinking about doing this too....but the screws on mine would not touch the fins![]()
I'm not so particular to brand of oil, but letting it sit overnight is a big help. I'll even oil the crap out of something and drive it the next day to give it a chance to work.PB Blaster. It works. If it can do stuck lug nuts, it can do rotor hubs. You just have to give it time to soak do it's think and not expect it to work instantly.
PB Blaster. It works. If it can do stuck lug nuts, it can do rotor hubs. You just have to give it time to soak do it's think and not expect it to work instantly.