This is a brief note from another website on how to remove the bolts
Because the impellor chamber is offset to the rest of the pump it is not possible to have all the bolts in the same direction. As you face it, the two bolts on the left are straightforward and easily removed. The two bolts on the right are a different proposition. They are the other way around. They come from the back of the pump and have no nuts but are threaded into the body of the pump. A short 12mm spanner working from in front and below the pump will, with a lot of contortions and swearing, back off the bottom bolt, but not free it! You eventually back up the bolt till it fouls one of the struts that support the engine. Leave it, we will come back to it later. Move on to the top bolt. Go to the back of the engine and with some jiggling, some luck and a 12mm socket mounted on a flexible drive you can get it! After hours of frustration, the combination that actually worked was a Stanley flexi drive screwdriver (£8.95 B&Q) which has a ¼ " drive and will take a 12mm socket. This combo had the bolt removed in 45 seconds flat, (once I had the socket located on the bolt head). This bolt will actually come out and you can then pull the whole pump forward and back off the rest of the bottom bolt, which we had abandoned earlier. With the pump off, it is home to the relative comfort of the garage. The cog is the first thing to tackle. There is a lock nut to remove, then the cog, which is a taper fit, is pulled off using a two legged gear extractor/puller (Draper, about a tenner, local Halfords or similar) The removal of the cog reveals a circlip that prevents the shaft from being released. With the circlip out the shaft can be gently tapped right through from the impellor end. This reveals the two bearings that let the shaft run smoothly and locate it centrally. In my case it also revealed a very nasty groove worn into the shaft which was preventing a good seal and causing the drip. The bearings are removed using the same puller, after two small circlips are taken off. The bearings have to be pulled off from the impellor end. Also remove the old seals from the body of the pump. New parts arrive from
http://jabscoshop.co.uk. Reassemble using new circlips, new bearings, new water and oil seals, new shaft and new O ring. First put in the new oil seal; a push fit with a smear of oil. Then the bearings can be pulled on to the new shaft using the puller and the two small retaining circlips fitted. The shaft can then be tapped through from the cog end. The big retaining circlip is fitted next; then the cog. I heated up the cog and using a bit of scrap copper pipe as a drift gave it a few hefty belts to make sure it was properly on, before replacing and tightening the lock nut. Now slide on the O ring from the impellor end and push in the water seal. You now have in effect a new pump for about £90. This is half the cost of a complete new pump from Jabsco and probably about a quarter of the cost from a Volvo dealer. Before refitting my rebuilt pump I hacksawed two slots in the threaded ends of the two bolts which had been difficult to remove. This enabled me to screw drive them from the front of the pump and contortions were then only required from the back with the spanner/socket for the final tweak. All the parts came from
http://jabscoshop.co.uk which also has an excellent parts wizard to