Today we will talk about how to clean, service, and re-lubricate (with winter in mind) a Shimano Nexus 8 speed internally geared hub.
First, we need to remove the external components. Turn the shift mechanism locking to the left and the shift assembly slides right off.
Remove the cog snap-ring. This thing can be a huge pain. Unhook it from its groove and get a screwdriver under it. From there, all you have to do it walk it around till it comes off. I like to wear safety glasses of some sort when doing this. Snap-rings can be unpredictable at times.
This bike is equipped with a roller brake. It's almost like a drum brake that's actuated with a hexagonal nut looking thing that 6 rollers rotate around pushing pressure plates against the inside diameter of the braking surface.
There is one nut that holds the assembly to the hub shell. Once that's removed, the whole brake comes off.
There is one nut that holds the assembly to the hub shell. Once that's removed, the whole brake comes off.
The dirty, greasy parts get a nice hot bath in the parts washer. I usually let the cartridge sit for an hour or so to allow the old grease to break down.
Apply grease to the bearings and clutch rollers. I also inject 3cc or 4cc of the special Shimano oil (ice cream topping) between the gears before putting everything back together.
Grease the back of the cog and reinstall (We have had issues with these making noise, and grease seems to solve the problem).
It's good practice to lubricate the roller brake regularly. Squirt some special roller brake grease in the grease port.
Loosely install the roller brake. Tighten the drive side axle nut, align the reaction arm, then tighten the roller brake nut to fix it to the hub.
Seat the axle in the dropouts and fasten both axle nuts. Align belt if applicable. Check all the gears to make sure there are still 8 of them. If there aren't as many as when you started, something went wrong. Shift into 4th gear and use cable tension to align the two yellow marks in the window.
After performing this service, the hub felt like it shifted faster and more crisply, especially in the extreme cold. One of our year-round commuting employees, Ben, who uses the same hub described the overhaul to make the shifting "less gummy and more direct. It gives me all of it," he concluded. I'm not really sure what that last part means, but it sounds pretty positive.