T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
398.1 | Grease? | ARCHER::SUTER | Gentlemen, start your *marine* engines! | Tue Jun 06 1989 11:00 | 21 |
| re: < Note 398.0 by CGVAX2::CLARK_J >
1. It's suprising how fast the grease in the trailer bearings
becomes useless. I try to do mine twice a year, it's really
a very simple procedure.
1) Remove rubber plug
2) Attach grease gun and continue to fill
until all old grease is purged and
new grease begins to appear.
It's only a ten minute job and saves the chance of hearing a
tire scratching along the highway.
2. With that size load the tongue weight is probably 300 lbs, in
which case 220 is fine. I understand that some trailers do
have an adjustment for tongue weight, but if it's
supposed to be up to 300 lbs then any adjustment will just
cause the trailer to handle poorly.
Rick
|
398.2 | | AD::GIBSON | Lobst'a Ayh'a I'm the NRA | Tue Jun 06 1989 11:55 | 10 |
| The wieght should be over 60 lbs but not more than you can lift, I
would say that 100 to 120 would be optimum for your rig. Every trailer
made can be adjusted to balance the wieght. Simply move the front bow
support till you have the stern no closer than 2" to your rollers or
even to the bunks. Not much further back than 6" or you will loose your
support. If you are still out of balance, jack up the trailer by the
frame, loosen all suppension parts and move the axels.
Walt
|
398.3 | 220 is about right | NRADM::WILSON | It doesn't get any better than this | Tue Jun 06 1989 13:14 | 24 |
| RE: Note 398.2
>> The wieght should be over 60 lbs but not more than you can lift, I
^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^
>> would say that 100 to 120 would be optimum for your rig.
Walt,
This goes against every bit of advice I have ever heard or read. The rule
of thumb is tongue weight should be 10% of total weight, but I have never
heard of the "but not more than you can lift" advice. For example, a 5000
pound trailer should have 500 pounds of tongue weight, and would probably
be all over the road if tongue weight were adjusted to be "not more than
you can lift". I thought this is why they sell weight distributing hitches
and 750 pound tongue jacks. Did I misunderstand you Walt, or are we getting
our info from different sources?
The rig in question here weighs approximately 2600 pounds, so tongue weight
should be 260. Considering that the tow vehicle is only a 4 cylinder,
the 220 pounds of tongue weight the trailer has now is probably ideal.
BTW: What kind of 4 cylinder vehicle are using to tow a 2600 pound boat?
Rick
|
398.4 | | PACKER::GIBSON | I'm the NRA | Tue Jun 06 1989 13:41 | 20 |
| Hi Rick.
I figured that with the 4 cyl tow vec. that the wieght load on the
hitch would be low to begin with, ie: Class 3 (I believe, if I didn't
mix up?) is only around 150 lbs? Yes?
If you overload the hitch wieght you will have steering problems
due to the car being off balance, also braking problems. Better
to have less wieght. I agree that with too little tounge wieght
that you can have fishtailing. That's even worse.
A boat of that size should most certainly be able to be moved about
by hand.
Walt
P.S. Grease the bearinbg buddys after each submersion, that will
force out any water that might have migrated into the bearing before
it can cause damage.
|
398.5 | have grease gun will travel | CGVAX2::CLARK_J | | Tue Jun 06 1989 14:12 | 11 |
| re .3, 86 volvo.
220,may be ok as a tongue weight but the 2600 lbs seems a lot to
pull with a 4 cyl.i use 2nd gear on any inclines.
bought a little grease gun at lunch,all set to blast away tonite,kids
dog wife house and maybe even the trailer.
thanks ,
Q
|
398.6 | Wheel Bearing Grease | USCTR1::FMACGILLIVRA | | Wed Jun 07 1989 12:37 | 5 |
| Be sure to use wheel bearing grease. Regular lubrication grease
will not work on wheel bearings. It cannot take the heat and will
melt and cause your bearings to burn. Wheel bearing grease can
handle the temperature and I believe it does a better job if water
gets into wheel bearings.
|
398.7 | The most correct form of grease! | SALEM::TAYLOR_M | Engineer of the '80s | Wed Jun 07 1989 14:09 | 19 |
| As stated previously in here: Lubrimatic makes small cartridges of
trailer wheel bearing grease for those one-hand mini-grease guns.
I bought a rack-pack of 4 cartridges of this stuff at Bliss Marine
in Woburn. Cost about $5. I liked them so much I bought a grease
gun just for these cartridges, so I didn't have to purge my gun
every time I had to do the trailer (and the stern-drive gimbal bearing
ass'y., and universal joints. ;^)
Now I'm all set to do the job right. I believe that
this type of grease is also recommended for applications such as
driving through mud-bogs, as stated on the cartridge body itself.
BTW-- If you didn't read the other note about this type of grease:
This grease is specifically formulated for extreme pressure, and
very good resistance to water of all types (except low-level nuclear
waste!). It's also got good high-temperature performance, which
makes it great forjust about anything that can be greased that goes
on water/land/or both.
Mike
|
398.8 | overload | CGVAX2::CLARK_J | | Wed Jun 07 1989 16:00 | 12 |
| too late,after shoting everything in site with my greaser i finally
shot the bearings.it pushed the front seal back out thus tightening
the spring,however it oozed out the front,OVERFILL? WILL IT HURT
ANYTHING?
i used that little lubrimatic gun but did not notice the grease,it
just came in a single cylinder as part of the package for about
$10.don't know if it is bearing grease,axle grease,hair
grease,fingernail grease or what.just stucc in the cartridge on
did a clint eastwood on old buddy bearing himself.
have i screwn up?
thanks
Q
|
398.9 | | ARCHER::SUTER | Gentlemen, start your *marine* engines! | Wed Jun 07 1989 16:51 | 11 |
|
RE: < Note 398.8 by CGVAX2::CLARK_J >
Probably a good idea to check the grease and make sure
it's recommended for wheel bearings and water applications.
The grease is supposed to ooze out the front, that is where
the old grease exits the bearing. Did you keep applying grease
until *new grease* started oozing out?
Rick
|
398.10 | pump now ,ooze later | CGVAX2::CLARK_J | | Wed Jun 07 1989 17:17 | 6 |
| no,i applied it until that seal moved out,and i could press on the
piston and feel some tension,then i stopped.i went back later and
found a small amount had ooozed out the front.i thought it pushed
the old or ovrefill out the back(or is there a back to come out
of).
Q
|
398.11 | Out the front! | ARCHER::SUTER | Gentlemen, start your *marine* engines! | Wed Jun 07 1989 17:46 | 9 |
|
> is there a back to come out?
Not that I know of, all the bearings I've done release the old
grease from the front and sort-of wrap it around the grease gun
nozzle.
Rick
|
398.12 | verrrry interesting | SWAPIT::SCHMUHL | | Thu Jun 08 1989 11:29 | 10 |
| The grease that oozes out is coming from the slider part. They sell
a plastic cap called a "bearing bra" to keep this grease from
splattering all over the rim and tire.
BTW- how does the grease fitting:
a) get the old grease past the new grease
b) know which is new and which is old
Larry ;^)
|
398.13 | bearing buddys...more questions | ATSE::URBAN | | Thu Jun 08 1989 15:55 | 42 |
| I've thought about installing bearing buddys a few times, but have stayed
with the clean, inspect and repack method 'cause I guess I like the
peace of mind I get from seeing & 'feeling' the bearings my investment
is riding on. When you read the box and talk to people that have them
installed I get the impression that the attitude is that you never have
to bother with bearings again as long as you keep the buddys pressurized
with grease.
Do those of you that use them periodically disassemble and inspect
your wheel bearings? How often?
From what I can surmise from examining the product, it seems that they
work on a positive pressure principal. You pump grease thru them untill
the entire hub assembly is full. The little spring loaded piston then
keeps a constant (3 psi, I think) pressure on this hub full of gook
which serves to keep water out. It would seem that this scheme depends
completely on the integrity of the rear bearing seal. Anything less
than a great seal will allow the grease and pressure to ooze out and
allow water in. Over time, even with a great seal enough grease will
be lost so a refill is required to restore pressure.
When you install them for the first time, do you prepack the bearings
and pre-fill the hubs. It would seem that getting grease by (thru)
the outside bearing into the hub and past the rear bearing to completely
fill all space whould take considerable pumping, and the pressure
developed pumping against the outside bearing might create enough
backpressure to give a 'fake' full indication resulting in no grease
going to the rear bearings. I mean, how do you know you have fully
lubed the hub, and not just filled the space between the cap and bearing?
As I said earlier, I 'feel better' seeing and feeling, and I just get the
impression that bearing buddys maight promote a false sense of well
being which will result in ignoring a critical maintainence item.
BUT, not exactly loving diving into a pot of grease a couple of times
a year, talk to me....so many people swear by them there must be answers
to my doubts.
Not from Missouri, just sounds like it
Tom
|
398.14 | They work for me. | CIMNET::CREASER | Auxiliary Coxswain | Thu Jun 08 1989 17:53 | 20 |
| I've used bearing buddys for three years and about 6500 miles of
trailering. They do the job.
I have to replenish them (pump them up) every third trip (250 miles).
When I stripped and cleaned them last fall, the internals were in
perfect shape.
One reason they seem to work is that a small amount of grease is
passing by the rear seal each time the hubs get warmed up on the
road. The excess gets thrown onto the inside of the wheel rim and
needs to be cleaned now and then, but seldom gets on the boat.
Given that nearly all of my launchs and haulouts are in salt water,
I'd say they helped greatly, But if the grease is not gradually be
changed (by oozing) and kept under constant pressure pressure by
bearing buddy's spring, then perhaps your experience would be
different.
Jerry
|
398.15 | overfill? | CGVAX2::CLARK_J | | Fri Jun 09 1989 10:06 | 10 |
| so there is no possibility of overfilling as the exceess will alwys
seek its own way out?
correct?
after i wrote the above paraq i checked my book.it says in 3 places
"dont overfill" overfilling can damage the seals.
maybe i need to drain some out,or am i making a bfd on=ver zippo
Q
|
398.16 | Bearing Buddy Bras | SLALOM::PEARSON | | Fri Jun 09 1989 12:58 | 9 |
| re: .15
The excess will find its way out, and will be all over your rim
and tire as another noted. For about 5 bucks you can get a pair
of "Bearing Buddy Bras" which fit snugly over the Bearing Buddy
and prevent the excess grease from flying all over the place - well
worth the investment!!
Jon
|
398.17 | | WODBOT::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Fri Jun 09 1989 14:44 | 4 |
| The 'bras' dont solve the real problem- that is the grease coming out of the
inside seal. You can also eaisly blow the inner seal completely out with a simple
hand grease gun. I use them on my trailer, and agree they are good devices,
but like most things, they dont solve all the problems.
|
398.18 | Trailer Wheel Hub Grease | FAIRWY::WILSON | Moe, Larry, Cheese! | Thu May 03 1990 17:25 | 23 |
| Moved by moderator
<<< VICKI::SIE$DATA0:[NOTES$LIBRARY]BOATS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< PowerBoats >-
================================================================================
Note 667.0 Trailer Wheel Hub Grease No replies
WJOUSM::MILLS "Intriguing" 15 lines 3-MAY-1990 16:13
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Last fall I followed the instructions in this notes file to winterize
my boat, motor, and trailer. All is well so far! The question I have is,
I disassembled the hubs as directed and cleaned everything up. Nice and
clean! This spring I reassembled the hubs with new inner seals after
repacking the inner bearings. After proper adjustment of the bearing
tension nut, I replaced the bearing buddy and started pumping in the
grease. I noticed real quick that I couldn't pump enought grease into the
bearing buddy to fill the hub cavity. Since the bearing buddy is designed
with an overfill hole to release excess grease, it leaked before enough
pressure was created to pass the outer bearings.
How do you people fill the hub cavity?
Thanks again,
Rich
|
398.19 | Keep adding grease. | MSCSSE::FRENCH | Bill French ZKO3-3/X8 381-1859 | Fri May 04 1990 09:53 | 18 |
| I did mine last weekend.
As I am reassembling the wheel (with new grease seals every year, since
I
can't seem to get them out without damaging them) I add grease wherever
I can - I try to fill the hub as best I can before the outer bearing
goes in. In any case there will be trapped air. Just keep the grease
gun handy. As you drive, the grease that is behind the piston will
displace air. If you wait 1/2 hour (we sailors take that long to
get the mast up and the boat rigged) and fill the bearing buddies
just before you launch, I have never worried about the air - as long
as the piston isn't against the inner stop.
Keep a spare cartridge of grease handy. If you hit an air pocket, it
may take a lot of grease.
After a few trips, all of the aid should be out.
|
398.20 | Sealed bearings? | ATSE::URBAN | | Mon May 07 1990 12:03 | 7 |
| re: .18
There is a remote possibility that the boat trailer has sealed bearings
in the wheels. You couldnt push grease past them. The fix is to go to
a bearing store and get the bearings in the unsealed version.
Tom
|
398.21 | No way! | CSMET2::CHACE | is it getting warmer? | Mon May 07 1990 13:42 | 14 |
|
Sealed bearings on a trailer's axle? Wheel bearings are tapered
roller bearings - there is no way to seal the bearings - and no need
to, since by design, they're made to sit in an enclosed hub with
some grease.
Just add a little grease at a time (as much as the bearing-buddy
will let you) and you'll never have to worry. Even if there IS some
air in the hub, the positive pressure exerted by the BB will not
allow anything to enter from the outside.
Kenny
|
398.22 | Spindles with built in grease fittings ? | GLRMAI::16.119.96.208::PNEIL | | Tue Aug 27 1996 14:36 | 17 |
| Hello All,
I've read thru all the notes I could find regarding bearings and bearing
buddies and I'm still trying to decide if I need them.
My trailer (Venture, tandem axle) is equipped with grease fittings on the
end of the spindle. The exit hole from the spindle seems to be just at the
inside bearings and grease (after some pumping) does make it's way out of
the outside bearings (and all over the wheel if I don't use caps). Anyway,
my question is, do I need bearing buddies if I regularly pump in some
grease until it squeezes out the outside ? Or should I install
bearing buddies (and forever give up access to the built in fittings)
and trust that the grease will migrate to the inside and fill the cavity ?
Thanks for any help,
Peter.
|
398.23 | BEARING BUDDIES ARE YOUR FRIENDS??????????????? | FABSIX::J_KASPER | | Tue Aug 27 1996 23:41 | 15 |
| PETER, the grease system you have on your trailer is the best system that I know
of for properly greasing wheel bearings without dissasembly of the hub.
If grease is comming out of the back of the hubs then, 1. you hvae to much
grease or 2. the seals are bad.
If you feel that the grease is not going thru the spindle properly then hub
removal should be done and flush out the grease passage ways.
How long has it been since this was done?----grease does tend to get a little
hard over time kinda like clogging of the arteries!!!
Bearing buddies generaly are for spindles that are not equipped with your system.
Jack (ex boat mechanic)
|
398.24 | | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Wed Aug 28 1996 14:30 | 4 |
| fwiw: My trailer has a similar (sounding) system - and the greasing
instructions clearly show an outlet port for old grease to be pushed out
of the inner race when new grease is applied to the nipple at the
outside/center of the spindle...
|
398.25 | Bearing buddies or not ? | GLRMAI::16.119.96.208::PNEIL | | Wed Aug 28 1996 17:53 | 25 |
| re .23 and .24
I can see grease being pushed out from the outer bearings and I know (cause
I saw it) the exit hole from the spindle is around the inner race. It all
seems to be working fine. But that wasn't my question.
I was asking if this system, assuming relatively regular greasing, is
enough to keep water out of the bearings and everything in good shape.
Or, should I install bearing buddies (and covering up the grease fitting on
the spindle) and trust that:
1) they will do a better job of keeping water out
2) the grease will eventually migrate thru, and fill, the hub
and adequately grease the inner bearings
Over the weekend I had a bearing fail and there wasn't much left inside.
So, this weekend I'm going to pull, and replace if necessary, the remaining
wheels and bearings. And I'm just trying to decide whether to spend the
extra $40 for two pair of bearing buddies...
Thanks for the help so far,
Peter.
|
398.26 | sea bears | SNMFS::BOWMAN | | Thu Aug 29 1996 00:08 | 32 |
|
I dont know if any of you have heard of a system called sea bears
it basically seals the hubs and runs auto trans inside.
coming out of the back of the hub is a clear looped hose used for
inspecting the level and colour of the fluid.
if it turns white water has entered, if it gets low some has seeped
out.
apparently running auto trans is better for the bearings??
i fitted them approx 6 months ago and not had a problem yet.
however i didnt like the hose joiner in the kit so used a brass one
instead of plastic .
to inspect i simply look at the hose.
no more greasing and pulling apart for inspection.
if interested i could find the contact here (the next olympic city)
tks the other reg
|
398.27 | Use bearing buddies when there is no other greasing system. | NETCAD::NPARE | | Thu Aug 29 1996 13:05 | 18 |
|
re -25 Peter,
With the system you have, you don't need the bearing buddies (actually your
system is better)..... The buddies need to force the grease through the outer
bearing first to get to the inner, where yours feeds the bearings from the
middle.....
The way the buddies (well both system) keep the water out, is from the
pressure that the grease generates wanting to get out..... What I have been
doing for years, is to pump new grease into the buddies everytime I use the
trailer...... This way, they're always full, and the grease is always trying
to get out, keeping the H2O out ;-)......
Norm
|
398.28 | Grease early and often | ESB02::TATOSIAN | The Compleat Tangler | Thu Aug 29 1996 14:51 | 4 |
| I also have made it a religious practice to gun the hubs every time the
trailer is moved - to the point that I'll give them a couple of squirt
when I arrive at the ramp and hit them again when I get home...
|
398.29 | I'll skip the buddies | GLRMAI::16.136.208.42::NEIL | | Fri Aug 30 1996 11:38 | 10 |
| re: .27 and .28
Just what I wanted to hear ! (Didn't really want to spend the extra $40).
So, I'll pull everything, check out the condition, and keep a loaded grease gun handy.
Hopefully I won't get stuck at 6:00am on my way to somewhere important (and fun) again.
Thanks for the info !
Peter.
|