Jeepsinker
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Me too!Man if you can develop a "bolt on kit" so to speak that will keep oil in these hubs I'd be all over it.
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Me too!Man if you can develop a "bolt on kit" so to speak that will keep oil in these hubs I'd be all over it.
Fair enough. But, if and when you do count me in.I have so many prototype projects going on right now it would have to wait.
tm 9-2320-361-20does anyone have the tm where i can find the procedure for this with torque specs? I've been searching and can't find it
The oil in the hub is very likely caused by a failed keyway plug.
I respectifully disagree.
If you look at the rear the oil fill plug is just about level with the bottom of the axle tube. So to me the hub could never carrie anything higher than the lower part of the axle tube or it would drain back to the chunk. The key way is on top of axle tube and seems like the only way it could ever have oil around it for any time would be when the truck or rear is cocked to one side for a good while then when level again it would drain back to the chunk leaving just the amount the hub can carrie up to the bottom of the tube. Im not saying that the key way will not let oil in but I vote for seal being the major leak letter. I also found on some of the axles I have done is how loose the nut/bearing is and that a loose seal would let oil pass by. If you look at a civvi semi truck the fill plug is higher ( half the tube ) because it needs to carrie oil out to the inner and outer bearings of the hub as they are oil bath type. MY.02
The oil in the hub is very likely caused by a failed keyway plug.
I respectifully disagree.
If you look at the rear the oil fill plug is just about level with the bottom of the axle tube. So to me the hub could never carrie anything higher than the lower part of the axle tube or it would drain back to the chunk. The key way is on top of axle tube and seems like the only way it could ever have oil around it for any time would be when the truck or rear is cocked to one side for a good while then when level again it would drain back to the chunk leaving just the amount the hub can carrie up to the bottom of the tube. Im not saying that the key way will not let oil in but I vote for seal being the major leak letter. I also found on some of the axles I have done is how loose the nut/bearing is and that a loose seal would let oil pass by. If you look at a civvi semi truck the fill plug is higher ( half the tube ) because it needs to carrie oil out to the inner and outer bearings of the hub as they are oil bath type. MY.02
Agreed. But don't forget that even in the (hypothetical) case that it always remained perfectly horizontal, during operation oil always gets on the axle shaft ends and from there, creeping outwards along the shaft, and finally collecting into the cavity between axle flange and (outer)seal. Once there is a puddle there it only takes a few revs to have oil all over the place and possibly into the keyway...Your thinking in horizonal position, these trucks are never horizontally, leaning severely to the right and left and the oil inside piles up, way up inside the axle tube.
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