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Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
Don White wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. Pansy. |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
. .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. Pansy. Maybe, but how much does the "device" cost - the one you mentioned above? |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: If you do it by hand, it takes patience I wonder if that's where the phrase "Greasing the palm" origionally came from??? |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
On Mon, 19 Feb 2007 17:18:01 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message om... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: Have you seen or heard of failures in other parts of the system? If so, where? Tires - improperly inflated or dry rotted, wheel bearings and brake systems - surge and electric. I've seen older trailers with bad bunks and rollers drive a hole in a hull so I suppose that counts. Whattya think of this: I've got bearing buddies on my trailer, bought in 1999. My mechanic's a boater, so during the trailer's NY inspection, he says "Let's jack it up & listen to the bearings". I know he's not looking for extra work because he refuses to work on trailers, except his own. His shop's a half mile into some woods, nice & quiet. He spins the wheels, says "Listen - I don't hear a thing. I wouldn't clean those bearings. Just keep adding grease when they need it". Good advice? Bad advice? Moderately good/bad advice? Did he apply the end of a screwdriver to the hub and place his ear on the handle while spinning the wheel. Doing this will let him know if the bearings are making strange noises. A stethoscope will do the same. If he just spun the wheel and listened from four or five feet away, I'd do it again. -- *****Have a Spectacular Day!***** John H |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
JoeSpareBedroom wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. Pansy. Maybe, but how much does the "device" cost - the one you mentioned above? Maybe $30/40 bucks for one with a grease gun. I think I paid like $25 bucks for one at NAPA. |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
Tim wrote:
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote: If you do it by hand, it takes patience I wonder if that's where the phrase "Greasing the palm" origionally came from??? ROTFL!!! There are probably five people on this list who know what that means. |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
. .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message . .. JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. Pansy. Maybe, but how much does the "device" cost - the one you mentioned above? Maybe $30/40 bucks for one with a grease gun. I think I paid like $25 bucks for one at NAPA. OK. I'm listening. What does it do? Hold the bearing in some sort of enclosure and press the grease in? I guess my other issue is the mess involved with cleaning the old grease out of the bearings. Now I have used kerosene, more stinking funnels and crap to store blah blah blah... |
Length of chains? (Was 'Cross chains or not when trailering')
On Tue, 20 Feb 2007 16:49:13 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... JoeSpareBedroom wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Don White wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message m... Many people don't know how to properly pack a bearing anyway. That's why I'm leary about dia-assembling and re-packing. What if I screw something up? It's not that hard and the are devices out there that can help pack bearings. If you do it by hand, it takes patience. If you use a packing device, you should do the procedure twice. It's not that hard. I just spoke to my boat dealer. $60 for labor to do the whole job, if I get the parts from them. Sounds like a better deal than trying to flatbed a busted up trailer. Pansy. Maybe, but how much does the "device" cost - the one you mentioned above? Joe, doing it by hand is easy. Here are some tips: (stolen from: http://users.westco.net/~tandjlm/berring.htm Packing Bearings By Hand: Now you have to pack your bearings. Here's something I should have said earler but didn't. If you are putting in new bearings or if you are reusing the old ones and have got them good and clean, with all of the old grease out, they are at this moment what one might call "dry". By that I mean that they don't have any grease protecting them from corrosion or from scratching. Actually if they are new there will be some sort of packing grease on them from the facotry to stop corrosion but that doesn't count. Please don't take that new or clean bearing in your paw and give it a good spin just for the pure hell of it. If you do the result will be micorscopic scratches in the rollers becasue there's no grease there to lubricate them. One of these days those scratches will grow up to be wolfs and they will bite you square on the ass, causing a bearing failure out there on the road somehwere. Now on to bearing packing. If anyone can describe, in writing, how to pack bearing they certainly deserve the Pulitizer. I'll try to give a good description of it but with little hope of explaining it very well. I'm right handed so I'll assume you're right handed too for my description. If you are left handed do this while standing on your head or something - you know, whatever it takes. Take a glob of clean grease about the size of a golf ball and plop it into the palm of your left hand, pull the grease down so the glob tapers as it goes towards the heel of your hand. Now take the new bearing (or freshly cleaned - completly cleaned - old bearing if you're just repacking them) and hold it in your right hand with your first finger through the center hole to steady it and your thumb on the upper edge to apply downward pressure. You want the small end pointing up. Remember that the bearing is made up of three parts; an outer cage, and inner cage, and the rollers inbetween. There is a space inbetween the inner and outer cages where the rollers are contained. You want to press that berring into the thin taper of grease in your left palm such that grease is forced into that little space and to completly surround the rollers. You want to keep pressing, lifting, and moving a bit farther into the grease in your plam over and over until grease comes out the small space between the inner and outer cages at the top of the bearing. When it does move the bearing around a little bit, you know, turn it a bit, and keep doing it until more grease comes out. Keep doing this until you have had grease come out the space all the way around the bearing. Once you have done this you will have forced grease to completly fill the voids where the rollers fit between the inner and outer cages. Its an interesting process and actually only takes about a minute per bearing once you get the hang of it. Once you get one done set the bearing aside on a clean surface (a piece of newspaper is OK) and do it to the other bearing for that hub. There, you've packed your bearings. Just remember that the goal here is to make sure that you have grease completly coating the insides of that bearing, not simply rubbed around on its outside. If you were to just plaster grease all over the outside of the bearing without forcing it into the void the effect would be a dry bearing under load when you finished the job and first moved the trailer. This would cause extreme heat to be generted becasue of the initial friction. The heat would melt the grease inside the hub and the void would be filled - so it wouldn't self destruct immediately. But you would have done damage to the bearing before the hot grease got to where it should have been in the first place. That bearing's days are numbered and the number is not a large one. -- *****Have a Spectacular Day!***** John H |
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