THEN DONT TRUST TIMKEN :-laf Just put new wheel bearings in our stock trailer I USED TO THINK LIKE YOU I bought Timken bearings and thought that they were made in U. S. A. Proudly took them home went to the shop and started to grease the bearings to put them in and took a break. Reading the info in the bearing box THEY ARE ALSO MADE IN CHINA!!!!!! I installed them and during the work week I called Timken and they said that they ARE INDEED made in china but to Timken standards. Timken does make industrial bearings that are U. S. MADE but the automotive part of their show has gone To China
Made in USA? Maybe. Timken and the other better known bearing manufacturers have factories all over the world. In the case I was referring to, the bearings were "no name" Chinese bearings, where the only identification on the bearings and cups was the word "CHINA" and the bearing and cup model numbers. Those I will never trust. I bought a full set of four inner and outer SKF bearings to replace them. If my memory serves me correctly, the inners may have been made in Poland (is that possible?) and the outers were U. S. cups and possibly Mexican bearings. In each case, though, the part was marked as being of SKF manufacture, with the part's model number and the country of origin. That's a different matter all together. The quality of the work and materials used, as said above, does indeed depend on the quality control measures taken by the manufacturer. I agree that trailer roller bearings are not high-tech items. But the steel needs to be consistent. Once a single roller or a soft spot on a cup starts to spall, all heck will break loose sooner or later. And I certainly can't hear a thrumming trailer bearing until it's too late.
I've seen Mexican-made LP gas fittings that were dangerous, where their Chinese equivalents were first-rate. But I don't have the problem where I need to use a jeweler's loupe to choose them before buying them if they are made in the USA. Some parts suppliers are beginning to understand this.
Here is the general way I decide if I will purchase an item, in order of choice. It is what I do, and I am by no means suggesting that anyone else should do it as well.
1. Is it U. S. made?
2. Is it made in Canada? (The United States is family, as their Prime Minister said in his address to the United States on September 11, 2001. )
3. Did the country send a military or support contingent to Afghanistan and/or Iraq?
4. Did the country send some sort of material support to the US and/or NATO efforts in Afghanistan or Iraq?
5. Is it a EU country or a NAFTA country?
I have found, and not to my surprise, that products from countries that fall into any of those five categories tend to be of pretty decent quality. (And yes, Poland falls into categories 3 and 4, by the way. )
