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Parts for your 2016 Nissan Pulsar-Centre bearing
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2016 Nissan Pulsar centre-bearing: is it fitted?
Short answer: a traditional centre-bearing isn’t used on the 2016 Nissan Pulsar. The Pulsar (B17 sedan and C12 hatch) runs a front‑wheel‑drive transaxle with two front driveshafts and no rear propeller (tail) shaft, so there’s no need for a tailshaft centre support bearing. This layout is confirmed by the Nissan Pulsar/Sylphy/Sentra Electronic Service Manual for the B17/C12 platform (Driveline & Axle/FAX sections), Nissan’s Electronic Parts Catalogue for these models (no propeller shaft or centre support listed), and workshop data providers such as HaynesPro/Autodata that show a FWD transaxle only.
Why it’s not used: centre-bearings live on multi‑piece prop shafts in rear‑ or all‑wheel‑drive vehicles to support the tailshaft through the middle of the car. The Pulsar’s power goes straight from the transaxle (gearbox/CVT and differential combined) to the front wheels via CV half‑shafts, so there’s no long shaft running down the car that would need a centre support. That’s the beauty of a compact FWD layout.
A quick note on terminology: some FWD cars, including certain Pulsar/Sentra engines, use a right‑hand intermediate shaft with a bracket and a small support bearing bolted to the engine block. That component is often called an intermediate or carrier bearing, not a centre-bearing, because it supports a front driveshaft—not a tailshaft. If fitted on a particular Pulsar variant, it’s a different part with different service steps and shouldn’t be confused with a tailshaft centre support.
- What owners typically service instead: front CV joints/boots, front wheel bearings, engine/trans mounts, and tyres/wheel balance.
- Common symptom guide: clicking on turns points to outer CV joints