Silly Seville
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Dec 5, 2009
- Messages
- 798
Hey Guys,
Has anyone ever shot their axle hubs with a thermo-gun immediately after towing a significant distance? I ask because I have noticed something peculiar about mine. I have a 28' tandem axle trailer with 4 wheel hydraulic actuated drum brakes. I serviced the wheel bearings a month ago, used Mobil 1 full synthetic grease and have Buddies installed. Also adjusted the shoes so that they were "just" scratching the drums when spun by hand.
After pulling 10 miles in moderate traffic, (several stops at city speeds) and 20 miles of 55mph highway use; I hop out to do the "hand to hub" temperature check. The driver side is always just warm, with the forward axle slightly warmer than the rear. However, the passenger side is HOT. Like, I don't want to keep my hand on it hot! Both axles too. So, I'm trying to figure out if this is a failing bearing issue, or a brake issue showing up as hot hubs. Is there a standard "too hot to hold" criteria for axle hub temps? I was always taught that you should be able to leave your hand on the hub indefinitely under normal circumstances without it being uncomfortable. I bought a thermo-gun and am going to take some base line readings tomorrow. Just wanting to know if anyone else experiences these wildly divergent temperature differences.
Has anyone ever shot their axle hubs with a thermo-gun immediately after towing a significant distance? I ask because I have noticed something peculiar about mine. I have a 28' tandem axle trailer with 4 wheel hydraulic actuated drum brakes. I serviced the wheel bearings a month ago, used Mobil 1 full synthetic grease and have Buddies installed. Also adjusted the shoes so that they were "just" scratching the drums when spun by hand.
After pulling 10 miles in moderate traffic, (several stops at city speeds) and 20 miles of 55mph highway use; I hop out to do the "hand to hub" temperature check. The driver side is always just warm, with the forward axle slightly warmer than the rear. However, the passenger side is HOT. Like, I don't want to keep my hand on it hot! Both axles too. So, I'm trying to figure out if this is a failing bearing issue, or a brake issue showing up as hot hubs. Is there a standard "too hot to hold" criteria for axle hub temps? I was always taught that you should be able to leave your hand on the hub indefinitely under normal circumstances without it being uncomfortable. I bought a thermo-gun and am going to take some base line readings tomorrow. Just wanting to know if anyone else experiences these wildly divergent temperature differences.