Replacing king pin for first time

Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Muddydog79, Feb 26, 2017.

  1. Muddydog79

    Muddydog79 Heavy Load Member

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    Looks like i made the right choice with yalls advice. It took them all afternoon to get one side pin out. Everything else came out fairly easy. They beat on it, heated it with a torch and beat on it sum more untill the hammer broke lol, then had to drill it out.
     
    Lepton1, cnsper, DougA and 1 other person Thank this.
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  3. DougA

    DougA Road Train Member

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    Glad it worked out for you.That's what happens,and it has nothing to do with maintenance.When you grease your kingpins,you're greasing the spindle bushings,not where the pin goes in the eye,that's the part that gets stuck.You want that part to be tight,it's just steel against steel,no movement.If that part gets loose,you have to rebush your axle eye,and that's a serious job.
    And like the other fellow said,salt can cause more problems,and there's not much you can do about that.Keep your kingpins greased on a regular schedule with quality grease,and they will virtually last forever.Grease not only lubricates,it pushes the corrosive moisture out.When I sold my last truck,it had 620k on it,kingpins were as tight as new.Helps to jack the truck up when you grease them if you can.
     
  4. bowtieboy77

    bowtieboy77 Light Load Member

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    I don't change king pins on our plow trucks because they wear out. Unfortunatly once they get about 8yrs old the king pins are still tight but the outer portion of the thrust bearing rots away exposing the rollers then steering starts to tighten up. Glad you made the right decision muddydog.
     
  5. Ridgeline

    Ridgeline Road Train Member

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    Told you it wasn't easy.

    You're welcome :)
     
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  6. Muddydog79

    Muddydog79 Heavy Load Member

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  7. cabwrecker

    cabwrecker The clutch wrecker

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    Wait did you do it or did you have a shop do it?
     
  8. Muddydog79

    Muddydog79 Heavy Load Member

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  9. Ridgeline

    Ridgeline Road Train Member

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    Muddy, try a little experiment.

    Figure out how much your time is worth, how much down time that truck costs you and then look at the amount of work they did by how many hours it took the shop to do the work.

    It they had two people work on it, double that time and then see how much it saved you.
     
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  10. AModelCat

    AModelCat Road Train Member

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    Kingpins are one job I've managed to dodge lol. Which part do they typically seize into, knuckle or the axle itself?
     
  11. Ezrider_48501

    Ezrider_48501 Road Train Member

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    typically they will seize into the axle itself but i have seen them freeze into the bushing as well, the npr i mentioned earlier in this thread was seized into the bushings as well as the axle. of course this was a probably 15 year old truck that only had 20k miles on it and i would guess the kingpins had never been greased and it sat A LOT.

    every other time i have seen them stuck they were just stuck into the axle.
     
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