Lil Jon said:Quackrstackr said:Those bearings are toast and just goes to show that yes, water does get inside bearing buddies. :wink:
There's nothing water tight about most of them, especially the cheap ones.
I called Wesco boat trailers today and they said same thing I did. If you are getting water in your bearings, you have a problem and you need to fix it. It should be a sealed system. Also said most bearing buddies leak because people pump too much grease in them and blow out the seal in the back. If you add grease and top it off every time you go it will blow out the seal. Call anyone who deals with boat trailers and knows what they are talking about will tell you the same thing. Call around. We can argue this till we're blue in the face or you can call a professinal as I did and ask for yourself. You might just save youself a bearing problem on the way to the lake.
Quackrstackr said:Lil Jon said:Quackrstackr said:Those bearings are toast and just goes to show that yes, water does get inside bearing buddies. :wink:
I guess that's why White Moose's bearings look like they do. All of that fresh air from a blown seal kept the inner bearing looking like new and the outer bearing next to the bb was rusted and falling apart by shear coincidence.
I don't have to call a "professional". I've had boats with bearing buddies for 20 years and have dealt with this kind of stuff for a living for just as long. I guess you could say that I am a professional. :lol:
While it's true that many people put too much grease in them and blow the seal, many brands of bearing buddies will let water in around the plunger. There are no if's, and's or but's about that. There is no rubber seal in a lot of them to prevent it. If my camera was working, I would show you a set of them that I have sitting right here to prove it.
Others have o-rings to seal against the piston but it the piston cocks a little bit from dirt or uneven spring pressure (they have to slide so there is a fair amount of play there), you just broke your seal and they will leak water like a sieve.
Just something to think about, but if a bb was a completely sealed system.. why would you need them? Their claim to fame is for ease of greasing the bearings without removing the hub. Where is all of that grease going if you don't have an inner seal failure? If you have a seal fail, you need to inspect and repack anyway.
Lil Jon said:He was putting the trailer in the water WITHOUT A BEARING BUDDY INSTALLED
No cap no nothing.
Quackrstackr said:Lil Jon said:He was putting the trailer in the water WITHOUT A BEARING BUDDY INSTALLED
No cap no nothing.
Bunk..
He lost a grease zirk a week ago. That's not water damage from launching his boat a week ago.
Zum said:My question(s) are,I touch my hubs to see if there warm after every trip,should that be a good indicator that the bearings are going bad?(probably to late?)
I do jack up the trailer and wiggle and spin the tires,everything seems tight,am I looking for big trouble?
Zum said:I have a question,maybe I should of started another post but will see.
I'm pretty lazy,when it comes to my bearings,I have buddies as well.
I've put a few miles on each week for the last 3 years and never have repacked my bearings...probably bad I know.
My question(s) are,I touch my hubs to see if there warm after every trip,should that be a good indicator that the bearings are going bad?(probably to late?)
I do jack up the trailer and wiggle and spin the tires,everything seems tight,am I looking for big trouble?
I grease them,every once an awhile.
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