I've never met that problem. Bottom line: The wheel has to come off and the axle shaft requires quite a bit more time and labor to locate and install. It seems the wheel must die, but I'm lost on a Chevy truck design.My 'time honored' remedy for 'frozen on rims'
My first search shows a half-shaft with CV joints and a splined drive. On my Ford, that spline is in a hub driving a flange which almost meets the backside of the wheel, but the disc brake is between the hub and the wheel. So your wheel stuck to the disc brake hub and the disc brake hub is also married to the drive flange?
I think this needs its own Thread, or an automotive site, because I really can't think of how to be helpful.
Further research shows that it always comes down to physical violence applied to the tire, not the rim. Another idea is a release agent between the wheel and the hub. Some say PB Blaster to get it loose. Some say anti-seize compound before you put the wheel on, but sometimes that washes out. I say, a thick piece of paper (poster board) between the wheel and the hub will always surrender, no matter how much rust it has absorbed.
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