Wheel bearing, how I break them, and why
I'm not much of a teacher nor a how-to writer, but I put this on another forum ad thought I'd share. Now that I'm on "real" suspension, 225's on 9's, and driving like a man I'm really wrecking wheel bearings. I'm packing them all with AMSoil 2000 race grease now and for the first time, bearings are lasting more than 2-days. I check the bearings every 3 -5 days and repack if the grease if it's anything other than white.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
hustler
So, I had some pack knockback again yesterday when I drove around to weigh my car. I bet all that extreme brake heat is what killed the bearing so I had a look.
Yep, the old Redline grease I tried died under the heat
http://i51.tinypic.com/4uwiz6.jpg
The AMSoil bearing grease started out white, but it was turning gray which tells me it overheated. However I should note that it was not black, viscosity was not reduced, and it did not stink. The Redline greased bearing reeked of burnt grease.
So I decided to rebuild a few bearings
http://i52.tinypic.com/29d9ymh.jpg
I got my hands on 2-cheap Mazda bearings from a buddy with a Woldpack account. Then I found this...what is this rough black shit in the race? I could feel the "gunk" on the race and took it off with a scouring pad. I'm not impressed for $95 each on an OEM Mazda part. Again, this bearing is new and straight out of the box.
http://i56.tinypic.com/11tn19k.jpg
Notice the heat-treatment stripe, I'll discuss that later.
Now we're going to monitor heat
http://i53.tinypic.com/10r0bwo.jpg
I usually use Timken or ebay China bearings. At this point, according to the notes I keep on the car, it looks like there is no durability difference between Timken or China bearings. I've started buying whatever is cheapest on ebay with a real picture that shows the heat-treating stripe and a rubber seal on the back. The metal seal-type fail quickly by letting brake dust in, the bearings without the heat-treatment stripe do not last one day.