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CV Axle Replacement (With Pictures)

185K views 82 replies 38 participants last post by  chidog  
#1 ·
I have been looking at this site for awhile and it allowed me to gain a lot of knowledge to save some $$$. Thought I'd share my experience. Recently had my 06 Murano (2WD) at the dealer for warranty repairs of lower control arms. Passenger side inner CV boot was also torn and grease is ALL over the bottom of the car. Dealer wanted $500 to replace the CV Boot only as it was not covered under warranty (I told him to shove it.) I figured I would just do it myself and below is my experience.

I decided to replace the entire axle since I was going to have to pull it out anyway. I got a remanufactured axle from a local autopart store for $73. I could have gotten one online for $44 but did not have time to wait for shipping.

First, jack up the car and remove the wheel. I then sprayed all of the bolts and nuts I would be removing with PB Blaster. I live in Texas and corrosion is not much of an issue but figured I would make it as easy on myself as possible. I let that sit for abut 15 minutes while I had breakfast.

I started by removing the cotter pins from the outer tie rod and axle nuts. Then I removed the bolt for the wheel sensor and removed the sensor from the hub. Be careful with sensor as it is made of plastic and damages easily (and it is not cheap!). I then removed the axle nut with a 32mm socket and my impact wrench. I then removed the nut from the end of the outer tie rod. You then have to separate the outer tie rod from the steering knuckle. Be careful not to damage the bushing on the tie rod (like I did with my handy pickle fork!, gonna have to replace that next weekend). Then remove the Nut and remove the bolt which holds the ball joint in the Hub housing.

Next, you have to separate the ball joint from the hub assembly. This was a PITA big time. I used a ball joint separator, and guess what, I damaged the bushing on the ball joint as well! Then, you may have to drive the axle back through the Hub using a sledge. Be sure to thread the axle nut back flush onto the threads before hitting it. If you do not, the threads will mushroom and the axle will be useless (even as a core). After that, there are only 3 bolts (and some rust) holding the CV axle in place. They are located just behind the inner CV boot and hold the axle to the frame. Once they are removed, the only thing holding the axle in place is rust. Luckily, mine came out pretty easy. Be careful when removing the axle not to damage the seal which goes into the transmission. Nissan recommends you replace this seal, although, I did not. Once the old axle is out, be sure to swap the dust cover off the old axle onto the new one (If your axle did not come with one). Assembly is the reverse of the steps above. The job took me about 3 hours from start to finish. Hope this may help somebody out who needs to do the same thing.
 

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#68 ·
With grateful thanks to this forum I managed to remove the cv axle from my 2006 murano. I'm in the UK and here we cannot get the cheap replacement axles that you get in the states. I was going to get one of your us ones delivered but I have noticed that there is a difference in the long shift that goes into the transfer case. The UK one has an extra bearing thingy which the replacements don't. Did the US ones have these and the aftermarket replacements have left this off. I will try and post a pic. Thanks.
 

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#72 ·
Nevermind. I put together my own tool out of PVC electrical pipe (E940K-CTN 2 1/2 Inch PVC Coupling) and cut it down to approx 3/4". I then used a bearing press that fit the opening and after freezing the seal for several hours was able to press the seal in quite easily.
 
#73 ·
Hello everyone. I've been doing some research into this as I need to change my passenger side CV axle and I'm a bit confused as to what part I need to order. I have a 2007 Murano S AWD and it seems like there are two possible CV axles that might fit it: Models "without an Intermediate Shaft" and a different one for models which I presume have one. RockAuto lists two totally different parts for AWD Front Right:



Image
https://www.rockauto.com/en/moreinfo.php?pk=6763080&cc=1434436&jsn=1051&jsn=1051&jsn=1051


Image
https://www.rockauto.com/en/moreinfo.php?pk=2745056&cc=1434436&jsn=1046&jsn=1046&jsn=1046


From what I've read here most people seem to have the latter of the two, but how can one tell? Is it encoded in the VIN? Could the dealership tell me without having to take it apart? My concern is I order the wrong one.


Note, the top one is NOT the FWD variant, that one is noticeably different.


Any thoughts on how to determine which one to get would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
 
#75 ·
Thanks Nitely,


That makes sense and that's what I expecting and just looking for confirmation.



One question though. When I replaced the wheel hub this past weekend I noticed that the drive shaft isn't easy to rotate by hand. I suspect that's because I had it in Park and the rear wheels were on the ground still. To make it easy to rotate should I lift all 4 wheels off the ground and leave it in neutral? Or do I just need to put more effort into spinning it?
 
#77 ·
So about a month ago I attempted this repair and it all went fairly well. The one thing that caused me some problem was getting the old one off. I tried a couple of different crowbars but there's very little good leverage when you're not taking that intermediate shaft out. What I ended up doing is taking some steel cable, wrapping one end around the inner CV shaft and tied the other to a cinder block. I slowly started pulling the cinder block away from the car and the thing just popped out. This is essentially an improvised slide hammer which is how you're supposed to take that off anyway.

Also, I never did detach the outer tie rod from the steering knuckle. Instead I just needed to loosen the strut bolts so that I could more easily move the strut to the side (it was fully disconnected from the steering knuckle of course).

So yay, I'm quite happy about that. Thanks for this site and everyone on it for helping out.
 
#78 ·
Ok, about a year later and I'm looking at the driver's side CV axle. I've been reading a lot about fluid loss, and I expect to lose a little NS2 fluid from the CVT itself. I bought 1L of NS2 fluid from Nissan, will that be enough or should I have more?

Also, I've read about cross contamination between the CVT and Transfercase (this is a 2007 AWD Base model). Is that an issue when doing the from Left/Driver's side or just when you pull out the full shaft on the right/passenger side?
 
#79 ·
I sourced a replacement front-left (driver's side) CV axle. The problem is that it does NOT have a C clip attached. First question, is it ok to reuse the one on my existing CV axle? If so, what's the procedure to remove it from the old one and install it on the new one? Do I need any special tools? Thanks again.