Well, after coasting on basic maintenance for quite some time, the Trusty Coupe suddenly sprung a fair leak at the end of the left axle tube, soiling its wheel, tire, and my garage floor with gear oil.
After girding my grid, I began diagnostic disassembly to find my worst case scenario was, in fact, reality: the axle bearing had failed (and I just put it in twenty years (and maybe 150K mi.) ago!). Shards from the ball cage ate the seal. Bummer.
So here I sit, elbow deep in rear axle as I take the "opportunity" to deal with some other deferred maintenance issues as well while I ponder the possible wisdom in "if you don't drive 'em, you don't have to fix 'em" (but what fun would that be the rest of the time?).
Sad tale of woe. Yahta, yahta, yahta.... But for me, there's a puchline here; why would the bearing fail? The gearbox drains showed the usual hairs on the magnet, but no chunks. The only debris at the bearing was pieces of cage (the balls seem intact).
So I put it to the very many more learned than I: What could have caused that rascal to self-destruct?
After girding my grid, I began diagnostic disassembly to find my worst case scenario was, in fact, reality: the axle bearing had failed (and I just put it in twenty years (and maybe 150K mi.) ago!). Shards from the ball cage ate the seal. Bummer.
So here I sit, elbow deep in rear axle as I take the "opportunity" to deal with some other deferred maintenance issues as well while I ponder the possible wisdom in "if you don't drive 'em, you don't have to fix 'em" (but what fun would that be the rest of the time?).
Sad tale of woe. Yahta, yahta, yahta.... But for me, there's a puchline here; why would the bearing fail? The gearbox drains showed the usual hairs on the magnet, but no chunks. The only debris at the bearing was pieces of cage (the balls seem intact).
So I put it to the very many more learned than I: What could have caused that rascal to self-destruct?
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