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Thread: Rear axle seals

  1. #1
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    Default Rear axle seals

    I am on the thrid replacement of my rear axle seals. Would the pin weight of my 5th wheel be the cause? I drive a 2006, 2500hd cc Duramax. I tow Jayco Designer 35RLTS. Total towing miles in between first bad seal was at 75k miles, second seal was 7k miles later and then now, 5k miles. My truck is rated to do the work and I am not out of wieghts. Any thoughts?

  2. #2
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    WAG:

    First seal wore a groove in the sealing surface, which caused the second and third seals to fail prematurely.
    The Constitution needs to be re-read, not re-written!

    If you can't handle Dr. Seuss, how will you handle real life?

    Current oil burners: MB GLK250 BlueTEC, John Deere X758
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  3. #3
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    Default

    I think you are overloading your truck. I would guess your pin weight is a least 2500 lbs. But thats not causing your problem. The limiting factor on the rear axel weight rating is the tires/rims, not the axel. I agree that you probably have a grove causing the seals to fail.

    Jay
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  4. #4
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    Hi
    Check your diff vent.If it is getting plugged the pressure will find a way out,ie axle seals.Seen that happen a few times.Might be getting kinked under load.
    Thomas
    90 Chev 3500 c/c 4x4,6.2na,400 auto,4:10 gears.DSG Timing gears,main girdle, isspro tach, pyro,boost,oil and trany temp.Dual Tstats, High volume peninsular pump,on shelf, Custom turbo and intercooler 85%complete. Change of plans for the dually, it's going to get a Cummins. Both trucks are Blue 90 4x4 crews

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Yukon6.2 View Post
    Check your diff vent.
    Good point.
    The Constitution needs to be re-read, not re-written!

    If you can't handle Dr. Seuss, how will you handle real life?

    Current oil burners: MB GLK250 BlueTEC, John Deere X758
    New ride: MB GLS450 - most stately
    Gone but not forgotten: '87 F350 7.3, '93 C2500 6.5, '95 K2500 6.5, '06 K2500HD 6.6, '90 MB 350SDL, Kubota 7510

  6. #6
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    Feb 2012
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    Evans GA
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by JohnC View Post
    WAG:

    First seal wore a groove in the sealing surface, which caused the second and third seals to fail prematurely.

    How would I go about fixing this? New axle shaft?
    Charles
    2006 Duramax LBZ, Edge with Attitude
    2010 Jayco Designer 35RLTS

  7. #7
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    Arrow

    Quote Originally Posted by Charles P View Post
    How would I go about fixing this? New axle shaft?
    It seals on the axle hub and flange, not the shaft. Proper sealing will seal the flange, or a Speedi-Sleeve will take care of the hub (or a new hub).
    1985 Blazer 6.2
    2001 GMC 2500HD D/A
    dmaxmaverick@thedieselpage.com

  8. #8
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    Thanks for advise. Tuesday will be the big tear down.
    Charles
    2006 Duramax LBZ, Edge with Attitude
    2010 Jayco Designer 35RLTS

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Charles P View Post
    Tuesday will be the big tear down.
    First make sure the vent line is not kinked or blocked. Even just a low spot in the line that allows oil do accumulate can cause leakage.
    The Constitution needs to be re-read, not re-written!

    If you can't handle Dr. Seuss, how will you handle real life?

    Current oil burners: MB GLK250 BlueTEC, John Deere X758
    New ride: MB GLS450 - most stately
    Gone but not forgotten: '87 F350 7.3, '93 C2500 6.5, '95 K2500 6.5, '06 K2500HD 6.6, '90 MB 350SDL, Kubota 7510

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by DmaxMaverick View Post
    It seals on the axle hub and flange, not the shaft. Proper sealing will seal the flange, or a Speedi-Sleeve will take care of the hub (or a new hub).
    The seals on the late model trucks are 2 pc seals so the flange to seal interface does not spin it is a static rubber to metal interface.

    I know of a guy who once claimed his spindles were cracked so they had to replace the entire rear housing, but I have no proof to verify this. It seems though that the Right Rear is common to leak as most that I have had apart were leaking. Not sure if I buy the cracking thing. Definitely watch the vent as mentioned earlier here.
    Kennedy Diesel-owner
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  11. #11
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    Default Air bags

    Would or rather do air bags help with handling heavier pay loads? The lower part of the axle shaft has rubbing on it around the outter bearing/seals. Nothing scored and the surface was smooth.
    Charles
    2006 Duramax LBZ, Edge with Attitude
    2010 Jayco Designer 35RLTS

  12. #12
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    Arrow

    Your problem isn't the load. The 11.5" AAM rated axle capacity is 10.5K, by the mfg (GM rates the axle according to tire/wheel capacity). It doesn't matter what you do to the suspension in regards to axle load. It will always be the same. Airbags help the suspension, not the axle. Your load may be considered "light", by some of us.
    1985 Blazer 6.2
    2001 GMC 2500HD D/A
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