This is a genuine OEM replacement part, it is sold individually.
This Ball Bearing is sealed on both sides.
Ball Bearing 605040-27
OEM part for: DeWALT, Porter Cable
Part Number: 605040-27
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Product Description ?
- Classification: Part
- Weight: 0.04 lbs.
- Shipping: Ships Worldwide
Frequently Purchased Together ?
Compatibility
This Ball Bearing will fit the following 522 machines. Confirm this part works with your model, and view the detailed model diagrams and repair help we have to offer.
Displaying 20 of 522 matching models.
522 total model matches. Try the above search to narrow your results.
This is the official OEM part for the following brands:
- Black and Decker
- Craftsman
- DeWALT
- Porter Cable
This item works with the following types of products:
- Chop Saw
- Circular Saw
- Demolition Hammer
- Drill
- Drill Press
- Grinder
- Hammer Drill
- Miter Saw
- Planer
- Radial Arm Saw
- Rotary Hammer
- Sander
- Saw
- Table Saw
- Tile Saw
This part replaces obsolete part #: 330003-75, 330003-13, 330003-13 (Npp), 605040-29, 895992, 895993
Customer Part Reviews ?
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Customer Repair Instructions ?
All our customer repair instructions are solicited directly from other customers just like you who have purchased and replaced this exact part.
Replace worn parts
Tool Type
Table Saw
Difficulty
Medium
Time
1-2 hours
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Socket set, Rubber mallet
Worn bearings
Tool Type
Chop Saw
Difficulty
Easy
Time
30-60 minutes
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Socket set, Bearing puller
Pulled the old bearings
Installed new bearings
Polished the commutator
Reinstalled the armature
Reinstalled the case
Made a test run to verify the repair
Bearing was froze up
Tool Type
Sander
Difficulty
Easy
Time
Less than 15 minutes
Tools Used
, Torx bit,screw driver,hammer
Parts Used
worn motor bearings, 1972 DeWalt Radial Arm Saw, bought new, steadily used for 48 years.
Tool Type
Radial Arm Saw
Difficulty
Hard
Time
More than 2 hours
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Pliers, Power Drill, Socket set, Wrench Set, Nutdriver, Adjustable Wrench, alan keys, penetrating oil
Parts Used
Replacement of these bearings is difficult, required pressing the old bearings off and pressing new ones on. It is not a hard interference fit, but challenging, because of access and difficulty find a sufficiently strong spot to set the puller. the interference fit to shaft (ID) requires hundreds of lbs force but the outside fit to housing is very easy, 50#. The major problem was tying to get the forward and rear section of the motor body apart. There are two roughly 1/4" alignment steel pins hard driven into the aluminum castings and these had corroded offering tremendous resistance to movement. I used JD weld metal filled epoxy to put 1/4" x 1/2" x 1" tabs on the side of the housing. I drilled the tabs and installed short 1/4 x 21 cap screws to provide a grip for the gear puller. After what seemed like a very high force applied, they broke loose and I managed to get the rotor out. I used a rubber hammer to drive the rotor shaft out of the forward housing and a gear puller to pull off the rear bearing. The rear bearing shaft was carefully cleaned, was lubricated with an anti corrosion spray and the bearing driven on using a deep 3/8 drive socket. The forward bearing was, after careful cleaning of the socket, tapped into place with a piece of 1/2" high density poly and a rubber hammer. The rotor and shaft were then pushed through the forward bearing and pulled into place with a pipe spacer and the reverse threaded brass nut that hold the blade on. The rear section bearing fits fairly easily into rear housing and is tapped home with the guidance pins and rubber hammer. The long bolts are put in place to hole the motor together. Hopefully these bearings will last another 50 years, much longer than I will.
I did not return the incorrect bearings because they are worth $8 total and postage would be $12. The correct original bearing number for front and back is 330003-16. The type 1 motor had different bearing fore and aft and perhaps this was the issue.
I would suggest on items like bearings, it would save a lot of time if you provided the three dimensions. Of all the websites I looked at, only one provided the dimensions. I then had to trace two more current replacement model bearings and found the right ones by typing in the current model number on Amazon. I probably had 12 man hours in finding the right bearings. Prices on the web varied from $1.86 to $27 for what appeared to be the exact same bearing.
R. Dryden PE
Blade was wobbling along with a whining sound
Tool Type
Table Saw
Difficulty
Medium
Time
30-60 minutes
Tools Used
, bearing puller, hydraulic press
2. Remember to unplug the saw...
3. Remove the plastic case by pulling straight back
4. Remove the armature assembly by pulling straight back. You may need to rock it back and forth.
5. Remove the bearing using a bearing puller
6. Press the new bearing into place.
7. Put everything back in reverse order.
8. Say a prayer and then start the motor
making a lot of noise, bearing going out.
Tool Type
Sander
Difficulty
Easy
Time
30-60 minutes
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Wrench Set, Nutdriver, bearing puller
Bearing was ruined overheated the field case
Tool Type
Table Saw
Difficulty
Hard
Time
1-2 hours
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Pliers, Dremel metal cutoff wheel 1” diameter
Self tapping screw came loose and stripped out
Tool Type
Sander
Difficulty
Easy
Time
15-30 minutes
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Torx head bit
Sander no longer did the random orbit
Tool Type
Sander
Difficulty
Easy
Time
15-30 minutes
Tools Used
, Torx bits
Parts Used
Main bearing siezed on blade drum
Tool Type
Planer
Difficulty
Medium
Time
15-30 minutes
Tools Used
Screwdriver, Pliers, Socket set, Wrench Set, Nutdriver
Remove belt
Remove drive gears
Remove main sub assy including motor
Carefully remove old bearings
Assemble
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Our customer service team are at the ready daily to answer your part and product questions. We have a dedicated staff with decades of collective experience in helping customers just like you purchase parts to repair their products.
All our part reviews are solicited directly from other customers who have purchased this exact part. While we moderate these reviews for profanity, offensive language or personally identifiable information, these reviews are posted exactly as submitted and no alterations are made by our team.
All our customer repair instructions are solicited directly from other customers just like you who have purchased and replaced this exact part. While we moderate these reviews for profanity, offensive language or personally identifiable information, these reviews are posted exactly as submitted and no alterations are made by our team.
Based on data from past customer purchasing behaviors, these parts are most commonly purchased together along with the part you are viewing. These parts may be necessary or helpful to replace to complete your current repair.
All our installation videos are created and produced in collaboration with our in-house repair technician, Mark Sodja, who has helped millions of eReplacementParts customers over the last 13 years repair their products. Mark has years of experience in selling and repairing both commercial and residential products with a specialty in gas-powered equipment.
This data is collected from customers who submitted a repair instruction after replacing this exact part. Customers can rate how easy the repair was to complete and how long it took. We aggregate this data to provide a repair rating that allows customers to quickly determine the difficulty and time needed to perform their own repair.