The bearings are cheap. Maybe too cheap to mess with trying to pry out a seal and repack. When you have one out you'll know if it can get away with grease or it's too lumpy already with worn races and flattened ball bearings.
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Philosophy...
Saving an old blower with a few simple new parts is better cheaper and easier than a new machine, IMO. Even another used one will have a list of things it needs. Got a devil you know? Only needs $15 in shaft bearings? Sounds like an easy decision.
For perspective, I had a fun episode when the needle bearings in the planetary drive/reduction/steering clutch came apart and locked things up. Replaced those (about $2 each for six). Replaced the same bearings you point to on the high-speed shaft, as they were pretty grumpy. When they finally seize on the shaft and spin in the hole in the drive box, your repair costs go up really quickly. For less than $30 in new bearings, I was able to keep the machine running. I ultimately replaced the shaft where the needle bearings had damaged it, but that was about $20 more. I just finished replacing the impeller shaft bearing as a PM task, after witnessing how under-spec'd the other bearings seem to be. Another less-than-$10 part and avoided future misery.
These parts are normal consumables on these machines. Doing the whole drive-box refresh replaces the wear parts in there and makes this worry-free for at least another five years. I already bagged a whole spare set of bearings for then, just in case. Keep up with the normal wear stuff like this and you'll be rewarded with lots of added service life.
Reading in the forum, there are more than a few folks who pick up used throwaways for cheap or less, replace the consumable parts, and pass the machines on to happy new owners. The rationale of not wanting to "put $15 of new bearings in an old $20 machine" is shortsighted; think of it as "only investing $15 in a $1,500 machine to keep it running". In the used market, maybe it's $15 into a sells-for-$400 machine. Not exactly a tough choice, especially right now with new machines in short supply, and premium+ prices on what is actually available.