It's a marine seal Bruce, different to the old fashioned ones you use.
The seals remain stationary on the axles and the running surface is on a stainless steel insert pressed into the hub, quite common now days.
Show me a link of what you have. Everything I see is the standard seal.Check Google Images for 'boat trailer marine seals' Bruce.
yes, I finally saw a picture where the two were shown separate. Wonder why they are used. The seals we use are double lipped just like the ones that are in your sterndrive.Yes that's the type but that seal is pressed on to the axle and the stainless steel outer ring is pressed into the hub.
The seal (rubber) remains stationary and the as outer ring spins with the hub.
Good idea, but I don't think that I'll be able to remove the bolt that is now part of the BB's face due to the JB Weld I used to hold it in place and seal the hole.
A pic of my temporary repair
I realize that JB Weld is some great epoxy, but even JB can't stand up to a good socket and ratchet to break them loose. And once you get that bolt out, clean up the area and install a jerk fitting. Jerk fittings are everywhere. You could even get a few from a salvage yard probably for nothing. Just take a small crescent wrench along and have at it... JMHO!
Holden is a local name for GM based cars down here.
I HAD a VE Commodore called a pontiac G8
are you guys using holden steer hubs as trailer hubs?
those multi piece seals look like what we use on commercial trailers IE "big rig" / lorry trailers
where a metal collar "wear ring" is installed on the spindle and the seal is fitted to the hub and then then the wheel end is assembled onto the unit
You might want to give the tip of your gun a turn or two. I`ve gotten my gun stuck before finding that the grip of the tip can be adjusted by turning the outside collar to loosen its bite.
You beat me to it. It's been my experience whenever a grease gun gets stuck on a zerk fitting, it's always just a matter of giving the collar around the tip of the gun a couple of turns counterclockwise. Just as when grease squirts out from around the collar instead of going in the fitting, a turn or two clockwise will tighten the connection properly.