Now things actually get a bit interesting.
I stopped in a small pullout where a couple of rigs were parked near the on-ramp to Hwy 17, made coffee and a bite to eat. I have seen Montezuma’s Castle and Montezuma’s Well a few times and decided to drive straight through to Quartzite about 250 miles and be as far past the Phoenix traffic I could be before morning drive time.
I did my normal check around the trailer and TV and headed out. The truck traffic was thick and they weren’t growing any moss on their tires and neither was I. Though I had taken it slow during the trip things were a pretty steady 75mph most of the way to Quartzite. On arrival I cruised around town to see where things were located, checked out the dispersed camping sites and settled on HI Jolly on Hwy 95 above town. I signed in at the host station and began to set up camp.
I noticed what looked like axle grease seeping out from behind the hubcap and thought, oh oh, am I losing a bearing? Except it wasn’t grease. It felt more like graphite. I popped the hubcap and as I was checking around the grease cap I realized a lug nut was loose. Then noticed another. I retrieved my lug wrench and the lug wouldn’t tighten. Actually 4 out of 5 loose lugs all spinning in both directions. 3 of them with a space about 1/2”
I can’t imagine what it would have been like losing that tire at 75mph! Only one lug holding the wheel on.
Because of the spinning studs I couldn’t get the wheel off without pulling the entire hub. Didn’t have jack stands with me or the tools needed. I decided to call a mobile mechanic and he came out the next morning, pulled the hub and I was on my way to Lake Havasu City with hub attached to tire and rim in hopes of finding a matching hub. Funny it was a beautiful ride up. I hadn’t been there in years and was amazed how much the place had grown.
I was directed to a trailer shop in town. They tack welded the studs on the back side to get the lug nuts off and miraculously had a matching hub. Insisted on cleaning everything up so I would have a spare at no charge for labor.
I texted the mobile mechanic that I had the hub and was heading back.
About 30 minutes from camp I got a call from him indicating he was hanging out at my camp and would wait for me.
After the repairs were made and we were chatting it turned out he was friends with the guy that had built out my old Willys Jeep over 25 years ago. Small world. It pays to be nice to people. The total parts and repairs with tip were less than $200. Half of what I was expecting out in the desert.
Seldom do we blame ourselves until we have exhausted all possibilities but both he and the repair shop said it was either incorrect studs in the hub or the wrong lug nuts in my new Dexter axle both leaning towards lug nuts.
I think it is on me but I’m just glad nothing major happened.
I never for a moment felt anything but gratitude for how everything evolved and enjoyed my Quartzite camping experience start to finish…

