OK so I owe this thread an update, just a quickie for now.
For no good reason other then they are 37 years old I decided I needed to replace the cush drive dampers in the rear hub, on my way to completely renewing the wheels. Those that have tried this already know what came next - this is a pain in the arse, but I do have a small contribution to make it 10% easier for the next foo^h^h^h^GUY that tries this. These dampers are more or less rubber rollers/donuts with a steel jacket on the inside and outside edges encasing them. The steel inserted tightly into the aluminum produces a tasty galvanic reaction more or less chemically welding these two together. That and the fact that the replacement dampers are $11 ea means that if I had it to do over I would not do it over. Yeah, they were hard as a rock, but still. ANYWAY...
Reading what threads I could find was little help, guys had resorted to desperate, spiteful attempts up to and including lighting their hubs on fire, and had no success other than cutting and hacking at them with pointy tools, huffing rubber smoke and sacrificing skin. I read a bunch of stuff on how to break these galvanic bonds using everything from heat/freeze cycles to phosphoric acid and more. I tried heating the aluminum body of the hub with MAPP gas, and then filling the (blind) recesses with a 50/50 blend of acetone and ATF, then removed the brew and put my blind bearing remover on the collar and whacked the living #$%* out of it, and pulled on it till I heard popping sounds from my joints. Nada. None of them so much as budged.
Tried heating it from within to break the bond, zilch.
Then I had the bright idea to extract the rubber and inner collar with a hole saw, except the smallest I had was 1". Never fear, I sourced a 7/8" holesaw that was a near perfect fit and that is the most fruitful thing I tried - I was able to 'core' this thing very quickly with the holesaw and a corded drill as you would an apple, thinking I'd attempt extraction directly on the outer collar with heat and my blind bearing retainer. Except that my collets jumped from 20 to 25 mm and this called for a 22-23 mm collet, so that didn't work.
So I stopped short of hacking at it with tools, switched gears to skinning the wheels and hubs and cleaning it all up and made a strategic retreat today and brought it to a local machinist who said he can burn them out with an oxy/acetlylene torch without damaging the aluminum. And he'll have it for me tomorrow. So that's what we're doing.