Dale M. wrote:Umm... Think about this... You drive your car-truck-van for 50-75000 miles and never pack front wheel bearings.... You could put 20-30,000 miles safely on a properly greased set of trailer bearings... The only EXCEPTION in my mind is a boat trailer where every time you take boat out the bearing get dunked... It this case its prudent to do it at beginning of boating season ( use water resistant wheel bearing grease for boat treilers)...
Dale
I'm with Dale on this one. You don't change the bearings on your car every year, why would you do it on your trailer??? Bearings last a long time, especially if you keep them smothered in grease. On my boat trailer I pump 3 or 4 squirts of grease into the hubs through the bearing buddies every time I take off on a journey. I check the hub-nut tension from time to time but rarely pull things apart. That is on my BOAT TRAILER!
The last time I pulled the hub off the boat trailer it had been on about 5 years. It was about 1/3 full of grease, no sign of water. Trust me, if you have a hub full of grease and the seal starts to leak you'll know because grease is everywhere. Watch for grease blobs on the inside of your wheels that tell you your seal is starting to fail.
You have a 2010 LG trailer? I'd say (personal opinion) if your hubs didn't come with grease fittings put on a set of bearing buddies. Pump in a few pumps of grease every time you use the trailer (if you try to pump in a bunch of grease all at once you'll blow the seal). Check the adjustment on the hub-nut once or twice a year (if it changes dramatically do a full service of the hub including new bearings/seals). If you are mainly driving paved roads (and you do what I recommend above) I can see no reason why you can't plan on 5 or more years from your bearings.
But hey, you know what they say about opinions...