Great thread. People should know that if you are not removing the entire case from the sled, you still most likely will have to loosen the bolt from the brake side to compensate for the extra width of the bearing. Once the case-cover is back on, just torque the bolt back to spec!
The problem described by Rucky is more common on the 2010 and 2011 Artic M8's, and does occur on a few 2009 M8's. It has to do with production tolerances on the aluminum tunnel assembly and the drive components from the DD housing and cover, to the brake assembly on the right side of the machine. The problem with some M8's is the tolerances "stack up" in such a way, that the drive shaft components are longer than the tunnel, DD housing, and brake housing components that hold the gear shafts, drive shaft, and track shaft assembly. Think of it as three shafts stacked end-to-end (from the left side: the DD reduction gear with the "bad" bearing, then the planetary basket with the DD output drive shaft, and then the track shaft). Those three shafts stack end-to-end. There should be some axial clearance (from 0.010" to 0.030") in the entire DD gear / drive shaft / track shaft drive assembly. They are splined or geared shaft connections, so it works fine with some clearance, allowing every bearing to find it's center.
If you happen to have DD & brake housings and a tunnel that are on the short side of the Arctic manufacturing tolerances, and your three shafts are on the long side - you are an unlucky owner and the combined shafts are too long to fit in your housings / tunnel. If you have no axial clearance with the stock 6203 bearing or with the new, stronger, slightly wider 5203 bearing, the aluminum tunnel will flex and put thrust loads on all the bearings. None of the bearings are intended for thrust loads, and the original 6203 bearing was the weak link in the chain, so it gave out first. Studied several forums on this topic and if you have no clearance, most people recommend shortening the track shaft slightly (from 0.020" to 0.160") on the DD end, to provide some axial clearance. Again this is needed on most 2010 and 2011 Artic M8's, and on a few 2009 M8's. Nobody can tell you exactly what to do, because all machines are different due to the (poorly managed) manufacturing tolerances.
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