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tragusa3's avatar
tragusa3
Explorer
Apr 02, 2016

Advised not to repack bearings???

Two years ago, and with our previous trailer, we had a miserable and expensive bearing failure while 4k miles from home. At the time, we had buddy bearings and were under the impression that they did the job. I have since been educated (expensively) that Buddy Bearings will not grease the inner bearings.

Fast forward to new and current trailer. We are taking a 6k mile trip this summer. Even though the trailer is one year and less than 2k miles old, we were willing to pay for a complete repacking. Yesterday, I went to the trailer shop where I met some very courteous and knowledgeable guys. The owner has had the trailer manufacturing business since the 70's.

They immediately said that my trailer has Dexter axles (the Mercedes of axles according to them) and they would just pump grease into the grease fitting. I was alarmed, as doing that had terrible consequences for me the last time. He pulled out a demo that he had and showed how the Dexter EZlube worked. It looked like it would logically work much better, but I want absolute assurance that our trip is going to go smooth this summer.

Question: Should I trust this improved way of greasing or still have the bearings repacked by hand? Of course I would have more piece of mind with the hand packing, but I would still prefer to save the $200 if I'm being silly.

Also, I picked up a complete bearing kit that I will grease and put in a ziplock as our spare. That alone will be more piece of mind.

Here's a video that shows what the mechanic explained to me.

Dexter EZ-Lube
  • I have heard that they make axle seals with a inner double seal which some have used successfully.
  • Wait until you get 10,000 miles on it and repack by hand.
  • Since you mention Mercedes, this is the brand I treat my family to and all of them, no matter if at 150,000 or 300,000 miles are still having only factory grease in wheel bearings.
    Trailers have poorer seals, what let the dust and moisture enter the bearings, therefore recommendation for repacking, but if you have better axle where manufacturer does not require repacking, I would follow the manual.
    On my utility trailer I never repack bearings in 25 years. Have grease fitting on it and just pump grease in. For some time used the trailer for PWC, so the wheels went under the water occasionally. No problem if you keep the hubs filled up with grease.
  • Just beware that E-Z Lube will let grease and the separated oil past the inner seal, then it coats the brake shoes and magnets. Bought a new fiver that has E-Z lubes on. After several years of use I took a hub off to check. Well there was so much grease in the hub from Dexter that it pushed thru, now remember there was never a grease gun on this trailer. Disassembled everything, cleaned up the Dexter cluster, and went old school, packed the bearings myself. And I have seen other E-Z Lube hubs in the same condition. It is a marketing ploy on the RV manufactures and dealers to make it "look easy". IMHO
  • I followed the direction on how to lube Dexter ezlube the first year I had my trailer. Took a lot of grease the first time I did it. Had tires off ground, turned wheel slowly while lubing hub with hand pump grease gun. It was real easy. The next year, as recommended by Dexter, I remove the drums to inspect the brakes. To my surprise, 3 of 4 wheels had grease leak past seal and on brake shoes. I had to get new shoes and clean the mess up. I called Dexter and the gentleman on the phone said the hubs were design for boat trailers, but the rv industry has jumped on them as a sale pitch. He still recommends packing by hand. I would never ever grease with gun again. Hand pack every year. Just feel much safer when I need to stop trailer.
  • Yep. With the Dexter EZ-lube you only need to add fresh grease and clean-up the old grease as it comes out. It's actually better than manual re-packing, since the new grease fills all the voids as it displaces the old grease.

    Of course, bearings sometimes fail even with proper lubrication, but I think you are fine with the mechanic's approach.

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