docdoru
Doru the Destroyer-Spyder Photo Investigator
No, just get ready for a new hub next time you change bearings. :doorag:Okay.... should I be scared?
No, just get ready for a new hub next time you change bearings. :doorag:Okay.... should I be scared?
No, just get ready for a new hub next time you change bearings. :doorag:
Sure thing!
Now I wanted to ask... when I took the seal out to access the sprocket bearing this "thing" fell out. The best way I can describe it is as a tightly coiled metal rubber-band like ring that looked pinched and mangled. It wasn't listed in the list of parts the exploded diagram so I have to assume that it was a foreign object that was in there that may had been the culprit of the premature failure of that bearing. The dealer was the one that replaced that bearing at about 21K miles.
I'll try to get a picture of it tonight when I get home.
Thoughts????
I really don't know what would cause that Hub bearing to go bad that quickly again. Bad install? Bad belt tension? Bad bearing from China?
Rear wheel axle = 96 lbf*ft
No, just get ready for a new hub next time you change bearings. :doorag:
Explain to me why you are harping on the hub. Is this something you have experience with? I just want to understand the relationships here...
Thank you for that detailed information. The hub / bearing relationship looked fine when I took it all apart last night. I just got back from a 10 minute road test and the belt seems to be good. We are just about packed and will be going to be here soon.
Thank you everyone who helped me out! :clap: :2thumbs:![]()
:2thumbs: I'm really impressed with your repair. Have a great trip.You did good SpyderGirl, :2thumbs: Now go have fun :clap:
Good information, Mike. I have extracted only this small portion, for comment....A good practice, though not required, is to use a liquid bearing sealer around the outer race so when it is pressed in it dries and acts like a bonding agent between the two surfaces preventing a "spun race".
:2thumbs: I'm really impressed with your repair. Have a great trip.
:thumbup:We're 80 miles into the trip and all is well.
I've had pretty good luck through the years using a center punch to expand the race surface area and then using loctite on the bearing race. This is a real common problem when alloy wheels that are chromed and that's what we do to fix them.Lamont's video shows "slop" at the outer race area which is NOT normal (any slop there = immediate fix). 2 ways of fixing this kind of wear if it is severe enough. 1) replace bearing with an "oversize" bearing or 2) rework the surface area and install a race sleeve. I am not saying these are approved procedures but, this is the only way short of buying a new major assembly that I know of.
Let me see if I can shed some light on this.
A bearing has an inner race (where the axle or bolt goes thru) and an outer race (the part that gets pressed into the hub or the next higher assembly). The inner race moves while the outer race remains stationary. Between them are the bearings (needle, roller, ball, etc) that allow this rotational movement.
Now if the outer race EVER begins to move or spin, then it has the potential of wearing out the surface it has been pressed into. In this case, the hub, has the potential to get out of its "roundness".
Lamont's video shows "slop" at the outer race area which is NOT normal (any slop there = immediate fix). 2 ways of fixing this kind of wear if it is severe enough. 1) replace bearing with an "oversize" bearing or 2) rework the surface area and install a race sleeve. I am not saying these are approved procedures but, this is the only way short of buying a new major assembly that I know of.
Bearings have 2 different "plays" to check for. One is radial (side to side) and the other is axial (in and out). Normal wear will have some slop or play. How much can you have BEFORE it must be replaced is the question. I am sure it is in the maintenance manual somewhere so I will not speak out on that limit.
A good practice, though not required, is to use a liquid bearing sealer around the outer race so when it is pressed in it dries and acts like a bonding agent between the two surfaces preventing a "spun race".
Hope this helped and sorry for the length.
Ride Smart ~ Ride Safe,
-Mike