Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong

   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,041  
Over here, its mostly grossly overloaded, poorly maintained single axle trailers without brakes, light nor tag that gets overloaded by folks that have absolutely no clue what dirt weighs, untill they bust a wheel bearing.
I travel sometimes on a highway that leads to the local coal mine and every year there are pick-up box trailers on the shoulder without an axle or wheel, heaped with coal.
I guess their idea of "I'll just drive slow", doesn't account for much when you grossly overload something.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,042  
Over here, its mostly grossly overloaded, poorly maintained single axle trailers without brakes, light nor tag that gets overloaded by folks that have absolutely no clue what dirt weighs, until they bust a wheel bearing.
That reminded me of a story I heard long ago. Mom (born 1910) said her father had a 1-wheel trailer that clipped directly to the rear bumper. A load of dirt was heavier than he expected, and they ended up upside down instead of making it around a slow curve. The extra weight that far back had swung the tail of the car out beyond where steering could keep the car on the road.


Kinda like how early VW claimed their cars were safer because if they ran off the road, it would be tail-end first. (That was really an advertising claim, back around the time that seat belts were introduced).
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,043  
Kinda like how early VW claimed their cars were safer because if they ran off the road, it would be tail-end first. (That was really an advertising claim, back around the time that seat belts were introduced).
I could see that, hit the tree with the rear bumper and have slightly more car to crumple and your forehead doesn't hit the steering wheel or the windshield, you just get pressed hard into the seat back
though your head may rapidly depart your torso in a rearward direction
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,044  
it was obvious the hub and wheel had come off the trailer leaving just the stub axle. Somebody forgot the cotter pin?
More likely they didn't notice (or care) when the wheel bearing started overheating, and eventually lost everything.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,045  
No time for a photo, but today at the merge point of two freeways I saw a CHP officer, flashing lights on, parked behind and protecting a small junk trailer. As we got closer it was obvious the hub and wheel had come off the trailer leaving just the stub axle. Somebody forgot the cotter pin?

Seemed to me the only way to get the pickup and trailer to a safe place would be to just order the pickup to drag the trailer as-is to the shoulder beyond the merge, because getting a wrecker in there and hooked up with a dolly would disrupt traffic and likely cause crashes.
If it happens on the left side the wheel bearing can seize causing it to weld to the nut which unscrews the nut and shears off the cotter pin and the whole assembly comes off.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,046  
More likely they didn't notice (or care) when the wheel bearing started overheating, and eventually lost everything.
Wouldn't that seize and break the axle at one of the bearings? I'm pretty sure I saw the entire axle intact clear to its threaded outer end.
If it happens on the left side the wheel bearing can seize causing it to weld to the nut which unscrews the nut and shears off the cotter pin and the whole assembly comes off.
Bingo! I think that explains what I saw.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,047  
I could see that, hit the tree with the rear bumper and have slightly more car to crumple and your forehead doesn't hit the steering wheel or the windshield, you just get pressed hard into the seat back
though your head may rapidly depart your torso in a rearward direction
The choice is whiplash or impact with the steering wheel. Neither is good.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,048  
If it happens on the left side the wheel bearing can seize causing it to weld to the nut which unscrews the nut and shears off the cotter pin and the whole assembly comes off.
How can the bearing inner race weld to the nut and not to the shaft, which is already a pressfit ? 🤷‍♂️
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,049  
How can the bearing inner race weld to the nut and not to the shaft, which is already a pressfit ? 🤷‍♂️
Good question, but I've also seen sleeve bearings weld themselves to the retaining washer at their face, without welding to the shaft. Same scenario, in principle.

I can imagine three contributing factors:

1. Thermal mass: Axle has better ability to carry heat away and dissipate it, remaining cooler than nut.
2. Lubrication: Perhaps grease or gear oil flows better thru the cylindrical capillary between axle stub and inner race of bearing, than between nut and the same.
3. Speed: Rim speed increases with radius, and outer rim of inner race at nut might be 20% to 30% larger than radius of inner portion of inner race at axle stub. Speed is linearly proportional to radius, but heat generated is square of speed, so difference in localized heating can be 1.7x higher for a 30% larger radius.

Likely all three of these factors played varying small parts. Remember, a bearing that has been press fit at room temperature will often not remain a press fit when heated, it could have several ten-thousandths of an inch play, at the scale of a small trailer axle bearing. Anyone who's ever played the game of heating a bearing and sliding it off by hand knows that trick.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #19,050  
How can the bearing inner race weld to the nut and not to the shaft, which is already a pressfit ? 🤷‍♂️

Good question, but I've also seen sleeve bearings weld themselves to the retaining washer at their face, without welding to the shaft. Same scenario, in principle.

I can imagine three contributing factors:

1. Thermal mass: Axle has better ability to carry heat away and dissipate it, remaining cooler than nut.
2. Lubrication: Perhaps grease or gear oil flows better thru the cylindrical capillary between axle stub and inner race of bearing, than between nut and the same.
3. Speed: Rim speed increases with radius, and outer rim of inner race at nut might be 20% to 30% larger than radius of inner portion of inner race at axle stub. Speed is linearly proportional to radius, but heat generated is square of speed, so difference in localized heating can be 1.7x higher for a 30% larger radius.

Likely all three of these factors played varying small parts. Remember, a bearing that has been press fit at room temperature will often not remain a press fit when heated, it could have several ten-thousandths of an inch play, at the scale of a small trailer axle bearing. Anyone who's ever played the game of heating a bearing and sliding it off by hand knows that trick.
Something has to happen to cause the nut to shear off the split pin and then unscrew the hub retaining nut on the left side of the trailer.. Where on the right side the effects would tighten the nut and in most cases the hub will slide over the nut and leave the inner bearing and seal on the axle spindle but in some cases the inner bearing and seal will go with the hub on the left side spindle

Take a look sometimes when you come across a trailer on the side of the road with a missing wheel due to bearing failure. On the shoulder side of the trailer the nut will still be on the spindle but on the lane side most times the nut will have unscrewed and go with the flying wheel.

It may not be from the bearing welding to the nut, could be the lopsided wheel hub rubs the nut hard enough to rotate the nut to shear the split pin. But I have seen the outer wheel bearing stuck to the retaining nut to the point that it requires a hammer and punch to separate the two.
 

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