โMar-08-2021 05:18 AM
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โMar-08-2021 12:57 PM
Gdetrailer wrote:
Man, I am glad I don't live where you do.
You can buy complete brake/backing plate assy's in left and right pairs for $95 HERE
Two axles takes two sets of the above so $190 plus shipping for all four wheels.
About $100 per drum (which gives you brand new bearings and seals) so four drums = $400 plus shipping..
So, to fully refresh all brakes, bearings and drums we are talking $600 plus shipping..
To replace all parts should take no more than 15 minutes per wheel just removing and slapping on all new parts..
Say 1 hr of labor at $150 per hr..
Most places do not "double" the cost of materials, more like adding about 25% on top of materials so call it $750 in materials and $150 in labor or $900 for all four wheels out the door cost..
However, I seriously doubt that full on replacement of brakes and drums will be needed.. Myself, I had to replace the backing plates a few yrs ago on a 30+ yr old TT and they WERE the ORIGINAL BRAKES!
I suspect it will be more like just check and adjust the brakes and clean and repack the bearings so in reality, the only "parts" would be needed is maybe $40 in new seals and a few scoops of grease.. maybe 1-2 hrs of labor (2hrs if they are padding the bill)..
Many auto repair shops typically charge less than $100 per wheel to "service" the brakes and sometimes you can catch a deal at $40 per wheel if you shop around..
Myself, it is an easy thing to do so I pull, check and adjust as needed instead of paying a mechanic..
โMar-08-2021 11:54 AM
โMar-08-2021 11:42 AM
Grit dog wrote:
I understand the cost of parts and retail cost of labor and for the work you're wanting/needing done, $750/axle isn't "bad."
Sure you can buy all the parts you need for somewhere between $25 (for a couple tubes of grease, parts cleaner etc and $500 (new complete brake assemblies and bearings/seals), but you aren't planning on tearing it apart in your driveway and repairing it, so $500 (worst case) in parts marked up 100% + the better part of a days labor @$100+/hr = $1500 all in to replace everything but drums is about right.
You can have the trailer place inspect and reuse parts, but bearings are cheap and not much savings to completely clean out old bearings vs popping in new. Brakes, provided they are in good working order, I would at a minimum replace the shoes. They may not be near worn out, but I just recently had a couple linings fall off the brake shoes on my 2005 trailer. Appears most are bonded not riveted.
Basically, $1500 gets you everything new and your hands don't get greasy. From there you or the shop could choose to save some of the parts, but you're paying similar labor charges either way.
RV dealer is a rip-off.
โMar-08-2021 11:37 AM
โMar-08-2021 10:13 AM
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โMar-08-2021 06:42 AM
rirish1 wrote:
I pay about $100 wheel for repacking the wheel bearings at an RV shop. Don't really need "axle" work unless they are bent.
โMar-08-2021 06:33 AM
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