Sep-09-2013 01:50 PM
Sep-10-2013 02:18 PM
Barney007 wrote:
I too have experianced wheel bearing failurs and fires within a 6 month period. First make a claim with the NTHSB. Second I had the repairs completed and the AXLES ALIGNED. A good truck/trailer frame shop can do this work. It will cosr around 100+ an axle. In my situation the rear axle was the culprit, camber was -1-5/8" and -1.0" on the other. The axles are now alighned and we will see about the other bearings. The trailer is only two years old and YES I too had the CHINA bearings from the factory.
Sep-10-2013 01:56 PM
Sep-10-2013 11:17 AM
byways wrote:
... I KNOW the axles were properly lubricated on both occasions (prior to failure). This recent bearing/axle has less than 3,000 miles on it, and is less than 1 year old.
What causes this?
Sep-10-2013 09:11 AM
JJBIRISH wrote:
well I see our resident China built supporters have checked in and tried to infer Chinese made bearings are good to go…
they apparently haven’t bothered to read about all the damage caused by cheap Chinese bearings and the millions of counterfeit bearings being sold today… let alone the safety issuer of counterfeits in the automotive supply chain…
counterfeiters are as good at making a bad bearing look exactly like or even better the brand name bearing, even the packaging and coding are exact replicas…
the bearing business is big business, everything rides on them… the problem is widespread and crooks outside of Asia are entering the game… they buy cheap china made parts and bearings shipped to Italy where they were being re-branded and re-packaged to be sold at 3 to 4 time their worth…
confiscated products included fake SKF standard industrial bearings, wheel bearings, belt tensioning units, timing belt units and SKF boxes and bar code labels as well as fake products and packaging from other leading bearing manufacturers and original spare parts producers.
also laser marking equipment as well as unmarked no-name bearings from China yet to be re-branded… SKF spokesman said” Judging by the number of empty boxes, this was a rather large operation. It was actually the first time we found a ‘manufacturing’ operation outside of Asia.” At the raid in Turkey, the team discovered Chinese bearings marked with a fake SKF trademark as well as those of other manufacturers – some 10 tons of fake bearings in total…
The only way to know you are getting a good and quality bearing today is to buy it from a verified direct distributor of the bearing you want… you can’t tell by looking at the box or the bearing any more… generic china bearings will be low grade steel and have a mineral oil-based lithium grease…instead of a high-quality, polyurea-thickened, synthetic oil-based grease…
The advantages of polyurea-thickened, synthetic oils increase at higher temperatures. They can easily achieve grease lifetimes which are 20 times higher than standard greases… This means the user may be able to increase the safety margin for lubricant-related bearing damage and simultaneously increase re-lubrication intervals.
Bearings don’t fail from over lubrication, they fail from under lubrication… the claims of over lubrication causing overheating and failure are true if you use the wrong grease for the application… the churning of a low quality grease overheats and separates and losses the oil leaving only the carrier and the bearing without lubrication that fails…
Sep-10-2013 09:06 AM
Sep-10-2013 05:50 AM
Passin Thru wrote:
Buy Timken Bearings. Never lost one of them yet. Pulled trailers lots of miles. Tighten them down until the wheel wont turn and back off 1/4 turn.
Sep-10-2013 05:46 AM
Sep-10-2013 04:38 AM
Sep-09-2013 10:41 PM
Sep-09-2013 09:30 PM
Sep-09-2013 07:25 PM
CKNSLS wrote:Shadow Catcher wrote:
There are bearings and then there are bearings, they come in different grades and from different countries. The ones that came with my Dexter axle were from China and I replaced them with SKF. I also used Amsoil synthetic grease and checked the castle nut adjustment my self.
There are literally thousands of trailers using the standard (i.e. China) bearings from the factory and haven't had the issues the OP has had.
Sep-09-2013 07:07 PM
Sep-09-2013 06:59 PM
Shadow Catcher wrote:
There are bearings and then there are bearings, they come in different grades and from different countries. The ones that came with my Dexter axle were from China and I replaced them with SKF. I also used Amsoil synthetic grease and checked the castle nut adjustment my self.
Sep-09-2013 06:24 PM
Bamarickandlisa wrote:
1. Always change the race with the bearing.
2. Use a good quality grease
3. Never mix different types of grease.
4. Do not over tighten the nut.
Sep-09-2013 06:11 PM