After about 400 miles my driver side axles are colder then my passenger side axles. In fact my passenger side axle one of them is almost to hot to touch.
I want to get a better understanding on what i need to look for when the mechanic takes it apart so that i dont get hosed on repairs.
Also my front hub is needing gear oil every two weeks but i cant seem to find a leak.
2013 Cascadia DD15.
Any help is appreciated.
Axle temperature question.
Discussion in 'Heavy Duty Diesel Truck Mechanics Forum' started by LoneRanger, Nov 21, 2021.
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The hub getting hot I would say
Possibly a bearing getting ready to fail,
Dragging brake, caused by a slack adjuster perhaps adjusted up to tightly or another issue in the foundation brake.
is differential low on oil?. That would cause a wheel end to get hot. But also the whole differential to get hot.
Front hub if not slinging oil from hub oil cap has to be leaking at the axle seal. Have you cleaned the breather hole in the middle of the rubber plug. If plugged will cause excess pressure to build in hub and push oil out of seal.Roger McG, Rideandrepair, God prefers Diesels and 2 others Thank this. -
everything this guy says.
Start with checking for oil at fill hole. Any leaks under that rear? The hubs should be pretty hot. On some long drives. My forward drive can be pretty close to my manual trans temp on long drives. I have gauges for all those temps. So we are talking close to 150 degrees.
Pick up a heat gun and shoot all your hubs after next trip and shoot the middle of the rears. Cheap temp gun should be in your tool boxjason6541, Rideandrepair, God prefers Diesels and 2 others Thank this. -
I’m feeling a drag on the driveline and I’m trying to chase it down.
it’s the difference in temperatures that has me worrying. That’s why I’m trying to figure out why one side is hotter than the other side with no visible leaks.
if low on gear oil, both sides should be hot, so that’s not the case. mid bearing is getting ready to go out then one side should be hot.
but I’ll pick up my temp gun next time I’m home and see if it’s around 150F after 600 mile trip.
mad far as the breather hole. Would you be able to show me where that would be if I show you the hub? -
Shoot your drums or discs too just to rule out a dragging brake.
God prefers Diesels Thanks this. -
Breather holes in the center of rubber plug.
LoneRanger and God prefers Diesels Thank this. -
Can you find a place to pull over with little traffic, so you can use your Jakes to come to a stop? Then get out and touch them.
Only one side on two different axles sure seems more like a brake problem than a bearing problem.okiedokie, Don379 and LoneRanger Thank this. -
got none. Center of plug is solid.
Rideandrepair and God prefers Diesels Thank this. -
Breather is on the axle housing, somewhere on top. Either looks like a button or has a vent hose attached to it that points down. Axle housing and hubs are all 1 common housing.
Rideandrepair and God prefers Diesels Thank this. -
Pull the plug turn it over. Use a straight pin or a needle. There is a small hole in the center of that little bump on front side.Rideandrepair, beastr123, Roger McG and 2 others Thank this.
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