Re: Question about repacking trailer bearings
Using bearing buddies can greatly reduce the frequency of repacking. With bearing buddies, you can completely fill the hub with grease and add a few shots of grease once or twice a season. With bearing buddies, I'll go five or ten years without repacking. Even then, things are still in good shape. Without bearing buddies, a lot of air spaces remain in the hub that water can go into; then, one should repack every year, if not more often.
Be sure to use proper wheel bearing grease; some greases are not rated for wheel bearings. Also, when adding grease to bearing buddies, use the same grease that you used to repack the wheel bearings. Otherwise, one grease can react with another grease and alter the vicosity of the grease. Grease compounds that include moly also may not be good for this type of bearing.
As someone above suggested, feeling the hubs to check for overheating works well for detecting dry or worn bearings. But that does not always work. I bought a used fishing boat and trailer last year. The hubs ran cool, so I was in no hurry to repack. Then I noticed one wheel leaning at a precarious angle. The bearings were totally destroyed and dry. But it still ran cool. It now has new bearings, seals, and bearing buddies.
