Nice how to!!
Is that the van sitting on a hydraulic jack though?

(From experience I can tell you a peugeot 106 drops "feck" quick when a seal goes in a trolly jack, makes you think twice how you get an axle stand under there safely let alone working on the jack!)
I once had a GSF bearing that loose, don't think I get it to greenlaneing though as it had done about 2000k miles! That was about the time everyone on here found out how useless they were. Had one go since due to water damage but after watching this I wish I'd tried it myself instead of getting it to a garage (I don't mind changing bearings when I know I have the bits to do it on the drive but drums don't come off my hubs and I never used to have the socket). I've always been a bit careful of wheelbearings since this happened...

Yes that wheel was still bolted to the halfshaft in the photo, and that means you loose all drive and breaking as the spline is out of the diff and the drum has cleared the shoes (single circuit footbrakes, transmission handbrake, RWD selected (though luckally as my free wheeling front hubs were locked I would have been able to engage the axle to get some drive and transmission brake back, but not footbrakes). A sealed for life thrust bearing is fine till it reaches the end of its life and breaks up! Not much chance of a roadside repair when the bearing requires 20t pressing onto the halfshaft ether, can see why they went over to taper roller bearings! Part of the joy of old vehicles I guess but recovery is hard when the wheels are missing!