B.G. Smith
TDR MEMBER
I have done that but I used 75W90 gear lube.
Interesting...I have done that but I used 75W90 gear lube.
I was leery of this procedure but now realize it works. Had I known I'd never gone with Dynatrac's.The " Unit" is sealed , the bearings inside are not so any grease put in through the ABS hole does get into the bearings. Overtime some grease works its way past the seals if there is alot in the unit.
Ram Man sells an adapter. Good 'ol boy. Sounds like he lives under a flight path.Somewhere long ago I posted a couple photos of an adapter I made from a small piece of aluminum. One hole for the bolt, a Zerk threaded on the other hole, and a small O'Ring. Can't find the adapter any more, I think the neighbor got it.
i wonder why one couldn't use gear oil, like is used on the rear axle bearings... if it's a sealed unit...
I've done the same across 4 trucks and never lost a bearing - one has 750k on it
i'd imagine one would have to vent the unit. so thats why grease is used over oil. but i'm not really sure.If the seals keep it in, yes, I think too why not. Oil is the best for the bearings by far.
Interesting. My truck is an '02 with the OEM front bearings still in place at 345,000 miles - never been greased. I have been thinking about replacing them, but maybe I should just grease them. Has anyone had any issues with the ABS light coming on after adding grease?
- John
Something I have to add to my list. Question: Any old wear bearing grease or? Thx for the post..
Is the such a thing as putting in too much grease?
I would think so, non serviceable units generally have a type of elastomeric seal and are not designed to be able to vent.
Thanks guys! I'll get this done today.Grease doesn't interferewith the ABS, nothing to watch out for on this side.
Amount, yes don't fill it all the way up.
Give it 10 pushes with the grease gun and call it a day.