Well, I got the new front wheels bearings, Karcepts hubs and 36mm axles installed today. Good lord, that's a terrible job. It's been a while and I had forgotten the pain of doing this on jackstands. Several issues arose:
-I've been using the same long, threaded bolt (with long, beefy nut to crank on) that came in a wheel bearing install kit for years. Today, for whatever reason, trying to get the first wheel bearing out, it stripped itself while I was using my impact on it. No idea why. 1st trip to the store. From that point on, I just used a giant 32mm wrench, which was oddly satisfying.
-Karcepts sends you shims with the kit, saying in some rare occasions, the axle will hit the knuckle and seize. On the left side, yep, it seized when trying to tighten the axle nut. No big deal. Just remove it and put the shim on. Good to go. Onto the right side...
-The right side turned into a nightmare... popped the axle in, sure enough, it seized against the knuckle, just like the left side... ok, I'll throw a shim on (they only supply you with 2)... nope, still seized. I'm out of shims. E36 M3. Well, time to head to Ace Hardware, who luckily, had the exact shims Karcepts sent out. Hooray! 2 shims and it's no longer seized. Sweet. I'm having a problem getting the right axle to turn freely with the wheels off and suspension at full droop ... I can't see anything it's getting hung up on, but the angle of the axle looks pretty sharp... I turn the car on while on jack stands, thinking I'll row through a gear to see if anything sticks out... As I start to go into gear, the car (right side) has a massive vibration and loud noise... E36 M3. I instinctively go to press on the brakes out of habit- completely forgetting they're not connected. Sigh. I'm hoping I didn't damage the caliper(s) from touching the brakes with no pads to press down on...
I'm completely stumped. I put a jack underneath the right side lower control arm, out of morbid curiosity, to see what would happen if I made the axle level... when the axle becomes level, all noise and vibration goes away completely and the axle spins smoothly with ease... was it the angle?
I take a closer look at the inside of the right axle, where it connects to the transmission... for the life of me, I can't get the axle to fully seat in the transmission. It's about 5mm away from the large plate on the axle from touching the transmission like stock. However, Karcepts did send me a ~5mm spacer to put on the end of it, to avoid leaks... maybe it's not supposed to be flush with the transmission due to the spacer? I have no idea and Karcepts didn't send any instructions for that specifically (which is odd, as they're usually extremely thorough). The wheel is engaging/getting power. The axle is spinning without issue... but it's not flush. I'll write Karcepts to see if there's maybe something I'm missing.
-I now have a slow transmission fluid leak from the right/passenger side of the car. Not sure if I potentially damaged the seal during install, or if there's something internal from the axle. For the record, I installed brand new axle seals ~6 months ago when I put in the B16b transmission and they've never leaked a drop.
So, I go to drive the car... I notice at low speeds (~5mph or under) when braking the car is now making a clunking noise... berkeley my life. It sounds more or less like it's coming from the right side. I'm not sure if I damaged the caliper from pressing the brakes with nothing to squeeze... or if one of the pads isn't seated right (the calipers did fight me more than normal)... or if the springy brake hardware got bent up today (at least one of them did seem loose)... or if I scuffed up the rotors/pads (no comment)... or if it has something to do with the axle... or if I somehow damaged one of the ball joints... I have no idea. All I know is that between wrenching and making 2 trips to the store, I worked on this stupid thing from 8am until 5pm. I then called it a night.
Beyond the clunking when coming to a stop, the car seemingly drives fine. I'll probably get to troubleshooting when I'm no longer seeing red.
Needless to say: I wouldn't recommend this swap to anyone running a B-series engine. It seemed like a good idea at the time. In hindsight, I would had just found some OEM hubs for this and continued using my stock axles.
For what it's worth, the smaller 32mm axles are about 1.8 lbs lighter per side vs the 36mm axles.
Side note: when I removed the old hubs that were on the car (DuraGo), I knocked out the studs and measured them: they measured at 0.4810"... ARP says their Honda studs (110-7711) are 0.485"... I'm pretty confident that the ARP studs would have worked just fine in the cheap DuraGo hubs. For reference the hubs were marked as part number TA95067.