Sorry this has took so long. I’ve been side tracked..
Attached is the pic of the plate I used to extract the pin. It’s a 1/4” piece of steel plate and I first drilled a 3/8” hole about 2”s in from the edge. I then cut the wedge out in order to fit this around the shaft of the pin. You will need to cut off the roller portion of the pin to make this work first.
You can now place the plate around the pin head, put the wedge in place, and I placed a small tac weld in the wedge to keep in back in its original place. Then , you need to align the plate and drill two holes , one over each of the angled sides of the hinge. This Is where bolts will be used and as they are ratcheted down against the sides of the hinge, the force will put pressure on the pin pushing it up and out of the hinge.
To do this step you need to eye up where the holes will be drilled, drill the holes ( I used a 3/8” bit), then two nuts can be tac welded on top of the plate. I used full threaded bolts about 4” long for this extraction. Use a vise to hold the hinge, ratchet the bolts at the same time ,and I used a few large washers under the plate to help keep everything level while extracting the pin. When I knew it was working correctly, I tac welded the pin head to the plate to make it solid.
Long story short, there is a good YouTube video of this if you search hinge rebuild. To get the new pin in place, I used a large bench top vise and slowly pressed the pin in place. Don’t press it in too far, make sure the roller stays free moving. I hope this helps folks.