Bob Sander
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Nov 29, 2021
- Messages
- 120
I am sure you will need to get in your last word!
Oh well
I am sure you will need to get in your last word!
If I repack my bearings at home I usually just hand pack new grease until I see it coming out the other side of the bearing forcing most of the old grease out. There is nothing wrong with hand packing, just don't sit in dirt. I have never introduced dirt or grit. One just has to be conscious of what they're doing.Agreed but then for a boat trailer what’s the proper interval? That’s all up to your use. As I said if I were a trailer boater with trailer getting wet every time I’d be regreasing every 3 months or so, my point is with easy/super lube you SEE what the grease coming out looks like! So go by that instead of some arbitrary time frame.
In my use I never had to replace the bearings but water dunkings were only 2-4 times a year (salt water though).
Yes I maintained 60s and 70s cars with those bearings and did the work with each brake job. And what I found:
Bearings usually fine; not easy to properly clean without a parts washer then you have to make sure all the solvent evaporated before repacking. Hand packing is not optimal and can introduce dirt/grit. In these regards the super/easy lube is superior. Regular regreasing and checking end play are important. If a problem develops you will be aware of it.
Agree, human error is always a factor. But if I was to mess up a job on a customers car because I wasn't in a correct state of mind I would've lost my job.Agreed
The flaw in your thinking however is that the PM will be performed correctly each time.
If you are human you make mistakes and it doesn't matter how good you are at the task you are performing. That's a simple fact. Maybe you didn't sleep well the night before. Maybe you have something else on your mind.... yadda yadda. And because of that there is a chance you make a mistake when performing PM. Meanwhile the entire objective of PM is to save time and money by identifying and repairing issues before they become issues, NOT possibly causing them. For this reason there has to be a balance between what is good and healthy PM vs what is unhealthy and risky when you start factoring in the possibility of human error, defective replacement parts and other such things.
We're talking apples and oranges now. Those are sealed hub/bearings which do not get repacked and have an expected life expectancy of 80,000 miles. Most garages will do a visual inspection of the under carriage during a simple oil/filter change. The tech should be looking for any leaks including grease leaking from the hub seals. No need to visually inspect bearings seals frequently, they either hold grease in or they don't.On a jeep jk (front dana 44 axle on the Rubicons), the axle seals are not on the outer ends of the axle tubes. They are at the beginning of the axle tubes on either side of the carrier. In order to do a visual maintenance check on the axle seals, I have to pull the carrier, the unit bearing, slide the axle out of the seal and then CAREFULLY back in again after inspection. Because the seals are so buried in there, I won't know if I have nicked the seal upon reassembly until I'm on the road watching diff oil seep out onto the ground.
Considering all of this..... is it worth doing regular visual inspections on the seals?
YUP.... a perfect example of too much PM getting you into trouble and costing you money. Clearly this person didn't understand what PM is about, or how much is too much.This what can happen when you use the LAZ-Lube method. Photos from an RV group I am a member of
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Well... if you messed up all the time then yes, you should be fired, but most businesses (if smart) have a certain amount of human error already worked into the overhead because nobody is perfect.Agree, human error is always a factor. But if I was to mess up a job on a customers car because I wasn't in a correct state of mind I would've lost my job.
We're talking apples and oranges now. Those are sealed hub/bearings which do not get repacked and have an expected life expectancy of 80,000 miles. Most garages will do a visual inspection of the under carriage during a simple oil/filter change. The tech should be looking for any leaks including grease leaking from the hub seals. No need to visually inspect bearings seals frequently, they either hold grease in or they don't.
All I'm trying to convey is keeping wheel bearings packed (no matter how it's done) with non-contaminated grease will help prevent premature failure.
Been watching this thread. The irony of this post is incredible.YUP.... a perfect example of too much PM getting you into trouble and costing you money. Clearly this person didn't understand what PM is about, or how much is too much.
Well... just for clarification, that's a cooked bearing which had been opened up on the highway and had ditch water dumped on every few miles for the last 50 or 75. If you open your eyes instead of being as judgmental as you are, you can see a bead of water hanging off the bottom of it and ask why as opposed to jumping to wild and unsubstantiated conclusions.Been watching this thread. The irony of this post is incredible.
Here is a perfect example of NO maintenance! Clearly this person didn't understand what PM is about!
View attachment 353886
That's exactly what he claimed he did. A bunch of people jumped on him thinking he did it incorrectly. He described exactly how he did it.OK so the pic of the greasy brake backing plate, there's more to that story, if you know how these things work, you know that you pump it with the wheel off the ground, turning the wheel and in a short amount of time (unless its the first time you are greasing it) the grease SHOULD exit the metal cap....if it doesn't something is obviously wrong like a leaking seal on the hub!
Meh,OK so the pic of the greasy brake backing plate, there's more to that story, if you know how these things work, you know that you pump it with the wheel off the ground, turning the wheel and in a short amount of time (unless its the first time you are greasing it) the grease SHOULD exit the metal cap....if it doesn't something is obviously wrong like a leaking seal on the hub! With disc brakes you'd see this on the back side of the hub area of the rotor but you won't see it with drum brakes for obvious reasons. But anyone who has experience with these systems knows that you must have grease coming OUT.
In 17 years of use with that system, drum brakes too, never had that happen.
It's a cooked bearing because it had NO maintenance.Well... just for clarification, that's a cooked bearing which had been opened up on the highway and had ditch water dumped on every few miles for the last 50 or 75.
Sounds like no maintenance to me.Usually once a year in the Spring. Don't take the hub fully off though. Jack it up, give it a visual and a spin... listen for grinding.
So if it had "no maintenance" then it is logical to assume the other 3 on the trailer had "no maintenance" either. How come they didn't blow too?It's a cooked bearing because it had NO maintenance.
Or you just don't use this flawed procedure.So he did jack up and spin, but did he see grease come out?
Had to be a bad seal and while of course that can happen, even with standard hubs, I don't know that we can say that the easy/super lube system is more prone to that problem, a failed grease seal can still leak grease onto a drum brake assembly.
PSMeh,
Lack of experience with all the grease is all, not "laz" or lack of trying.
As far as I know, no human has ever popped out of the womb, grabbed a grease gun and knew exactly what to do with it. We all learn through our attempts and failures. No biggie.
So I am guessing you didn't pull the other 3 to find out?So if it had "no maintenance" then it is logical to assume the other 3 on the trailer had "no maintenance" either. How come they didn't blow too?
I'm not doubting your experience Bruce but I never had that problem always used the better Dexter double lip seals though. Maybe that is what makes the difference. If so that would be good for people to know.Or you just don't use this flawed procedure.
I bought a used pontoon boat and puled all the hubs. Every hub had corroded inner bearings. The previous owner had been using the LAZ-Lube method. Sorry...don't trust it one bit.
All the seals that came on my travel trailer with Dexter axles had double lip seals. When I pull my hubs and repack my bearings, I replace them with Timken or National seals that are not made in China like the original dexter bearings and seals are.I'm not doubting your experience Bruce but I never had that problem always used the better Dexter double lip seals though. Maybe that is what makes the difference. If so that would be good for people to know.
I asked you a question and you skated around it. Why?So I am guessing you didn't pull the other 3 to find out?