Trailer hubs shedding grease caps

   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps
  • Thread Starter
#31  
The wheel bearing may be too tight, producing more heat that normal. Supposed to be 1 flat off from slightly tight. Make sure the Cotter pin isn't interfering with the cap.
I guess you missed the temp readings that were taken of the hubs. (earlier posts) It is not getting hot or even warm. I wish it was something simple like that but so far nothing is jumping out.
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #32  
One old RV trick is to dimple the sides of the friction fit area with a punch. Dimple them outwards.

Back around late 90's my dad wanted to go on a west camping trip with me. My mom probably encouraged it to get him out of her hair for a couple weeks. 😆 I had a Fleetwood pop-up and when we got to the FS campground near Meeteetse WY I noticed a cap was gone. This was down several miles of gravel road. My dad had the idea of the bottom of a beer can that we electrical taped on. It worked great. We got to Cody and spent the night in an RV park so I could clean and repack bearings. A local RV place had a replacement dust cap.
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #33  
That is for a much lighter weight axle and hub but the principle is the same.
I believe you. That's only a 7000 lb. landscape trailer, two 3500 lb. axles.

I like zzvyb6's idea about checking the cotter pin. It'd be nice if it were something that easy!
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #34  
I guess you missed the temp readings that were taken of the hubs. (earlier posts) It is not getting hot or even warm. I wish it was something simple like that but so far nothing is jumping out.
It's not the heat from excess bearing conditions, but usually water vapor from the atmosphere going in and out as the air pressure changes, or the hubs see water from rain. Those caps are usually tapered in a manner that they want to come out, so any little inside pressure will do the job.
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps
  • Thread Starter
#35  
It's not the heat from excess bearing conditions, but usually water vapor from the atmosphere going in and out as the air pressure changes, or the hubs see water from rain. Those caps are usually tapered in a manner that they want to come out, so any little inside pressure will do the job.
I think the rubber plug would blow out way before it pushed the metal cap out. The metal cap takes a very significant effort to get in and to seat. I may try the dimple idea but has not happened in 17 years with this trailer until now and somehow it has to be tied to the brake assembly and bearing R&R.
I have to disagree that the caps want to come out. They are a real pain to remove when pulling the hub and brake assembly.
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #36  
I don't care for center caps because you can't monitor the hub temps but maybe use them to hold the grease cap on. Measure the void and fill it with something.

Southwest Wheel Two Pack of 5 Lug Closed Push Through Center Caps 3.19" Outside Diameter for Trailer Wheels - X2319 | Southwest Wheel®

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   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #37  
^ This. If three of your four hubs are fine, and just one keeps ejecting caps, it's obviously time to pull that one apart and figure out what's happening. I can't believe anyone would actually suggest mod's like pinning the cap or venting the hub, EZ Lubes are a well-engineered system that should work without DIY mods, and it's clear there's a problem with just this one hub.

I can't agree with the recommendation to try Bearing Buddies, either. They're great for boat trailers, esp. those without brakes, but tend to create more problems than necessary for trailers with brakes. Plus, if you're not dunking the thing in the water (boat ramp), Bearing Buddies really hold no advantage. EZ Lube really is the superior system for landscape and utility trailers.

For those who don't know, Bearing Buddies are a closed cavity system with a spring plunger that maintains constant positive pressure on the cavity. This is supposed to be only 2-3 PSI, if used correctly, although way too many people over-charge them with grease to where the rear seals completely fail. But even if used correctly, their main method of venting grease is thru the rear seal, into your brake drums, making your brakes ineffective. They also have to be completely removed from the hub, if you ever want to clean out old grease and re-pack. Lots of disadvantages, with their only advantage being that their positive pressure prevents water intrusion on a hot bearing, when you dunk them in the lake or ocean on a boat trailer. Boat trailers are really the only appropriate place to use Bearing Buddies.

Conversely, EZ Lubes have an open-loop system. You inject fresh grease thru a zerk drilled into the center of the axle stub end, and there's a channel thru the axle stub to the back of the inner bearing. Injecting fresh grease pushes the old grease out around the axle stub, in FIFO fashion, making it very easy to replace old grease with new with just a few pumps of the grease gun. They can work on boat trailers as well, by pushing milky water-laden grease out, but they're really best for land-based trailers.

At least some of us are trying to find a solution to the problem. All I see, is, you write a book and still don't say anything to help.
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #38  
This person had a new trailer and after 450 miles, the cap was found to have fell off, just like the OP. He got a new axle under warranty because it was "defective". Some of the people on this thread are not fans of the ez-lube system and I would agree. I grew up repacking wheel bearing at a garage and never had problems like this.

https://www.airforums.com/forums/f437/problems-with-new-ez-lube-axle-244673.html
 
   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps #39  
At least some of us are trying to find a solution to the problem. All I see, is, you write a book and still don't say anything to help.
DIY mods or hacks of a well-engineered system are rarely if ever an improvement. Find the source of the problem and correct it to work within the designed intent, don’t slap a bandaid on it.

EZ Lube is a great system, used on many trailers with no issues. We need to find why it’s failing here, not talk about how to modify a proven design.

If this were mine, given my time is worth more than few dollars, I might just remove and replace that one hub assembly, if out of other ideas. Quick, easy, and not very expensive on the scale of truck and trailer pricing.

But we never heard back on the cotter pin.
 
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   / Trailer hubs shedding grease caps
  • Thread Starter
#40  
But we never heard back on the cotter pin.
Yeah I kind of ignored the suggestion as there is no cotter pin and I did not want to call it out so I just said nothing.
To the best of my knowledge EZ lubes never have cotter pins, maybe some do but not to my knowledge as the cotter pin would go right through the grease channel and block it so they use either a tang washer (not a fan of) or a special spindle nut retainer (which is really kind of cool device).

 
 
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