I have a salt water use Magic Tilt trailer that calls for EP#2 grease. Just wanted to see what others use.
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Super Tech Marine Grease, 14 oz Tube
Last edited by thejoefletch; 03-28-2020, 04:38 PM.Comment
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I will suggest that almost more important (especially for salt water) than the specific grease brand/whatever is the use of bearing buddies instead of the factory dust caps on the axle hubs.
I currently use the stainless steel Bearing Buddy (model 1980A-SS fits my hubs).
Not shown, I put a plastic dust cap (BRA-19) over the bearing buddy to keep road grit out.
The bearing buddy maintains a slight spring loaded positive pressure on the grease inside the hub. And that maintains a slight positive pressure where the inside grease seal rides on the hub surface. If the seal was to allow water to seep inside, the positive pressure on the grease at the seal lip instead pushes the water out.
The result is the grease seal and mating axle seal surface are kept lubricated by the pressurized grease inside, water cannot get in, and the wheel bearings do not rust since there is no water inside.
The Bearing Buddy shows you whether more grease is needed and grease can be added using the accessible grease Zerk. Takes only a minute to add more grease and only a glance and/or a finger press to confirm that enough grease is inside.
If a grease seal on the hub back side starts to leak, you will know when the indicator ring on the bearing buddy recedes again shortly (some miles of towing) after adding grease.👍 1Comment
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With the bearing buddy removed I can pump grease in through the original internal grease zerk. The fresh grease flows through the axle core to the rear of the hub and then pushes the old grease through the bearings and out the front. I pump fresh grease in until I see clean grease following the old grease out.
I use a plastic bag to catch the exiting grease. Wipe up the hub area when done and dispose of the oil grease.
Then I reinstall the bearing buddy. And add a little more grease to pump the bearing buddy indicator ring out to almost 'full height'. Trapped air will escape during subsequent tow trips and I add more grease as needed until the indicator movement settles down from trip to trip.
I do not change the grease every year. Can't say I actually have a strict schedule, maybe 2-3 years?Comment
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I am currently using Schaefer 221 grease.
I have dual axles with disc brakes on all four hubs (EHD). Since the trailer fully loaded weight is maybe 3000 pounds the disc brakes just don't get super warm and I think am ok using a regular waterproof wheel bearing grease that is not rated for high heat.
The axles are rated for 2500 pounds each, so also running well below their weight capacity.Comment
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Triton uses
Chevron 277111652 Starplex Grease Ep2
I get it on Amazon in a case of 10. I change my grease every year. Im saltwater. maybe overkill but im fine with it. I dont do much mileage with the trailer anyway. I have the same trailer as K447 and also a single triton.XLT 800 converted to 1300 EFI 74MPH FZS ET15.5 Fizzle R3 Jims FF SVHO plate 88mphComment
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If you have a leaf spring axle the old grease will exit into the axle tube not out the front.2023 FX Limited SVHO.
2017 GP 1800 Stage 1+Comment
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Where the old grease exits depends on the type of axle/hub. Leaf spring differs from torsion axle.
And, IIRC, Triton used different axles (with different greasing system) on some (perhaps older) trailer models, and may have used different axle manufacturers.
Best way is to check which brand and type axle is actually on the trailer, and then look at the axle/hub configuration to verify which grease system is present.
E-Z Lube vs. Sure-Lube, for example.Comment
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