reelfishin
Captain
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2007
- Messages
- 3,050
Re: Bearings heating up after change.
I don't think it's so much a matter of "How tight" as to just not have any excess play. A properly adjusted bearing which is properly lubed will gain only minimal heat during normal operation. I just came back from 90 mile run with my one trailer, the bearing caps feel no warmer than the rest of the trailer. The only heat noticeable to the touch is in the tires themselves after a 70 mph ride for three hours or so.
The bearings have no looseness detectable. I normally just tighten the bearings to hand tight, or the point where all play is out, then go to the most accessible position on the castle nut. If it's closer to the last one, I turn it back, if it's closer to the next opening, I tighten it slightly.
You can also vary the adjustment a bit by swapping the castle nut as a different nut often gives you a better option for the cotter pin. I keep a box of old nuts for this reason.
The damage from looseness comes from impact and the lack of load distribution, especially on a heavily loaded trailer run on rough roads.
Regardless of what various manufacturers say, whether it's for their own protection or to simplify instruction, the method I've been using for so many years has worked fine.
Bearings don't generally get tighter with heat, everything expands together, including the hub and bearing bore. This is the reason for so much preload on both rear axles and differential bearings. The lack of preload there will create catastrophic failure in short time.
I don't think it's so much a matter of "How tight" as to just not have any excess play. A properly adjusted bearing which is properly lubed will gain only minimal heat during normal operation. I just came back from 90 mile run with my one trailer, the bearing caps feel no warmer than the rest of the trailer. The only heat noticeable to the touch is in the tires themselves after a 70 mph ride for three hours or so.
The bearings have no looseness detectable. I normally just tighten the bearings to hand tight, or the point where all play is out, then go to the most accessible position on the castle nut. If it's closer to the last one, I turn it back, if it's closer to the next opening, I tighten it slightly.
You can also vary the adjustment a bit by swapping the castle nut as a different nut often gives you a better option for the cotter pin. I keep a box of old nuts for this reason.
The damage from looseness comes from impact and the lack of load distribution, especially on a heavily loaded trailer run on rough roads.
Regardless of what various manufacturers say, whether it's for their own protection or to simplify instruction, the method I've been using for so many years has worked fine.
Bearings don't generally get tighter with heat, everything expands together, including the hub and bearing bore. This is the reason for so much preload on both rear axles and differential bearings. The lack of preload there will create catastrophic failure in short time.