Without notice my right rear axle bearing went out. No pre-grinding or warning what so ever!
I was in town driving 30 mph when it went out - horrible grinding (metal on metal) sound from the rear end. I pulled the outer hub cap and could feel the heat on the axle hub.
I limped it home - 8 miles. By then it had virtually welded itself to the threaded axle housing. As a result, I had to CAREFULLY torch cut it out from between the inner threaded axle and the hub housing on the outside. The bearing didn't budge until all bearings had been cut loose. It was a 7 hour job to get everything apart. The hub housing could NOT be pulled off. It had to be torched.
It was scary as heck torching the bearing and race off. One wrong move and I would have dammaged either the lug nut housing (outside) or the ENTIRE axle housing (inside) - because the axle on my rig is all ONE piece. The threaded inner axle shaft is PART OF the rear axle housing.
The 2 1/2 inch outer axle nut with nylon imbeded in the top had all the nylon melted away and the trough-shaped retaining pin was fried as well. These were fried before I had to get in there with the torch.
The new bearings and seal cost $30, BUT the new 2 1/2 " nut and retaining pin (Dealer only parts here) was $50!! I could have replaced BOTH sides (bearings and seals) for the cost of the fried nut alone.
I'm dang lucky I wasn't hauling a load back from Montana and in the middle of BFE.
My advise to all is to replace your rear axle bearing on your preventive maintenance schedule (every 80K to 100K - depending on how hard you haul) and DON'T wait till they go out on their own. It will be MUCH cheaper and safer to do them on YOUR time and place.
And... they're not hard to replace - 30 min. job IF they're not seized and welded to your truck.
I was in town driving 30 mph when it went out - horrible grinding (metal on metal) sound from the rear end. I pulled the outer hub cap and could feel the heat on the axle hub.
I limped it home - 8 miles. By then it had virtually welded itself to the threaded axle housing. As a result, I had to CAREFULLY torch cut it out from between the inner threaded axle and the hub housing on the outside. The bearing didn't budge until all bearings had been cut loose. It was a 7 hour job to get everything apart. The hub housing could NOT be pulled off. It had to be torched.
It was scary as heck torching the bearing and race off. One wrong move and I would have dammaged either the lug nut housing (outside) or the ENTIRE axle housing (inside) - because the axle on my rig is all ONE piece. The threaded inner axle shaft is PART OF the rear axle housing.
The 2 1/2 inch outer axle nut with nylon imbeded in the top had all the nylon melted away and the trough-shaped retaining pin was fried as well. These were fried before I had to get in there with the torch.
The new bearings and seal cost $30, BUT the new 2 1/2 " nut and retaining pin (Dealer only parts here) was $50!! I could have replaced BOTH sides (bearings and seals) for the cost of the fried nut alone.
I'm dang lucky I wasn't hauling a load back from Montana and in the middle of BFE.
My advise to all is to replace your rear axle bearing on your preventive maintenance schedule (every 80K to 100K - depending on how hard you haul) and DON'T wait till they go out on their own. It will be MUCH cheaper and safer to do them on YOUR time and place.
And... they're not hard to replace - 30 min. job IF they're not seized and welded to your truck.