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  1. Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps
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  3. Seals
  4. Grease Seals - Double Lip
  5. 3.376 Inch O.D.
  6. 2.125 Inch I.D.
10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals - Qty 2
TruRyde

10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals - Qty 2

Part Number: RG06-090
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Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps
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TruRyde 2.125 Inch I.D. Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps - RG06-090
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Great Prices for the best trailer bearings races seals caps from TruRyde. 10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals - Qty 2 part number RG06-090 can be ordered online at etrailer.com or call 1-800-940-8924 for expert service.
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  • Reviews (238)
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TruRyde Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps - RG06-090

  • Seals
  • Grease Seals - Double Lip
  • 3.376 Inch O.D.
  • 2.125 Inch I.D.
  • TruRyde


  • (2) Double-lipped grease seals

I.D.
O.D.
Use With:
2.125 3.376 E-Z Lube and Oil 5,200, 6,000 and 7,000 LB Axles


Seal Cross-Reference
Dexter #
Transcom #
National #
NOK #
Chicago Rawhide #
010-010-00
21334TB
470972
AD8717EO
21352



RG06-090 Grease / Oil Seals 10-10 (Pair) - Double Lip Seals





Video of 10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals - Qty 2

Videos are provided as a guide only. Refer to manufacturer installation instructions and specs for complete information.




Video Transcript for Feature Review Replacement Race for 02475 Bearing

Speaker 1: Today we're going to take you through the rebuild process on a couple of hubs. We've got an idler hub, and here we've got a hub and drum assembly. Works with electric rigs, but this can also work for just standard discs, if you've got a disc brake style setup.Basically what we're going to show you is how to get all of the bearings out. How to remove the seal. How to remove the race's if they're damaged, then get them replaced in the proper manner. We'll show you how to use an easy loop hub, which we have here.The first thing we are going to need to do is, get the grease cap off the end.

It can have either a rubber plug in it like this one does, or it can be a solid metal cap.These are pressed fit in there, basically by tapping on them on the back side. To remove them, a deadbolt hammer is typically what we're going to use. We're just going to start tapping as we go around. You'll see a little separation start right here, and slowly it'll work it's way off.Now the next step's going to vary a little bit depending on your axle setup. Do you see this is going to have a keeper that goes around the nut.

And that prevents that from being backed off, or removed. A lot of times you'll have a castle nut, which will have just little tabs that stick off, and there will be a cotter pin that passes through it. Just depending on your application, you need to get the keeper for the nut off. This style we just kind of pry out. A cotter pin you would just remove of course.Once we have that off ...

We'll start to take off the nut here, and the washer that's in behind it. Now yours should look a whole lot more dirty than this. There should be a lot of grease packed in, and through the hub, this one's brand new. We thought it'd be nice to show you the components before the grease was on .. Of our washer that comes off.And then here we're going to have our outer bearing.

Continue to pull that. We're gonig to have our inner bearing here. That sits in the backside of the hub. And we didn't put it in yet, we will show you how to put it in. But a seal would typically be covering the backside here. We'll show you how to use a seal removal tool, or another tool. To get that pried up and out. To get an access to that inner bearing.Now for a drum style like this, that process for disassembly is going to be just the same. One thing to keep in mind if you're using a disc brake setup. You'll have to remove the caliper before the disc is going to come off.Now once we have the spindle exposed, as we said this is going to be really greasy. We want to get all the grease removed, and the first thing we'll do is inspect it. We want to make sure that it looks just like what we have here. Everything's nice and smooth. We don't see any kind of discoloration, or any marring on the metal. Indicating that our bearing's got hot.If you do have any of those symptoms, at this point it's time to replace those bearings. You don't want to repack them. Get new bearings, and put in there. You might have a bearing that's come apart in here. Another surface to ensure is in good condition, is where your seal is going to go. That helps seal all the grease inside of our hub. With a damaged or broken seal, that grease is going to seep out. Either out of the hub, or in this case into our brake assembly.Now if your axle has brakes, we're also going to check the disc. Make sure it doesn't have any issues, or your hub. And this is going to be a hub and drum assembly. The brakes are going to ride on this machine surface. You're going to check that for signs of excessive heat, discoloration, or cracking. And this is our magnet surface. We'll check that surface for the same issues.Now inside the hub regardless if it's a disc brake, it's a drum brake like this. Or just a standard idler style hub. You're going to have an outer race. Would be right here, it's a small tapered piece of metal your bearing sits in, and rotates on. That's basically the outer portion of the bearing.You have the same thing here on the backside. This is called the inner race. Now if those show any signs of wear, overheating, or cracking. Those are also something we'll need to replace, which we'll show you how to do in just a minute.Now, with your brake assembly exposed, if you do have electric brakes like we have here. It's a good idea to check all the components for wear, cracking, maybe missing pieces. Check your pad thickness to make sure those are in good shape. Basically if you have a non working brake assembly and you put everything back together, you're just going to have to take it apart and do it all over again to get back to the brake assembly. This gives you a really good option to be able to change them out.And most applications are going to use a four, or maybe a five bolt flange to hold them in place. And you'll just remove the lock nuts, or sometimes you'll have a hex nut with a lock washer. You want to remove those, and then simply slide your assembly off after you cut the wiring.The friction material itself should also be checked for any kinds of cracking, or overheating. If you have any grease inside the system at all, it's likely it's gotten on those pads. It's a good idea to get those changed. Now as far as the removal of the races go, it's going to be just the same whether we're using an idler style hub like we have here. A drum brake like we have here. You can basically see where the idler is, here in the middle of the hub. It's going to go all the way around there, and we just have this extra material here to provide our braking surface.Now if you're doing a disc brake style job again, it's going to be just the same here with the races living inside of the actual hub portion. You'll just have the discs there for the brakes to make contact. We're going to use this little bit smaller one, it's a little bit easier to manage to show you how to get these out. We've talked about where the races are. The outer here, the inner being closer to the inside, but on the backside of the race there's a little lip. That lip's meant to stick out just a little bit further than the hub, and provide us an area to put our tool on, and help to drive that out.If you look all the way through there on that inner race, you'll see that little lip that sticks out just from the hub slightly, and it gives us enough area to use our tool on. Now generally to remove these you're going to use a punch, similar to this. Some guys will use a screwdriver. Or a piece of pipe. If you have a piece of pipe that's small enough to fit inside of that diameter, you can take that down through and allow it to rest on that lip.Use our punch, and then just need a hammer. And we'll start working that out. We're going to tap all the way around. Kind of equally, and evenly apply the force to get it to come on out of the bottom for us.You can see now as it starts to come out there's going to be a little gap created between the hub and the race. And we can just keep going, bringing it on out. Then you can inspect the inside of the hub surface there. Make sure no damage or anything has occurred, and repeat that same process for the outer race if you plan on removing and replacing that one.Now in the outer flat edge, you can see we're going to have our tapered edge on this side. If we roll our race over to the flat side, typically there's going to be a manufacturers part number on there. That will help you identify which race it is, that you need to go back in your system. If those are rubbed off, worn off, if you can't read them. You can measure the outside, to outside diameter of the race here. It's a good idea to use a micrometer to get it exact.Now here's your basic micrometer. And again, the outside of the race is what we're going to need to measure. You want to go . I set the thickest point there. Looks like this one's going to be about 1.98. That's going to be the measurement you'll want to supply.Now while we've got this out, let's also look at the proper way to measure our bearing. Instead of the outside for the bearing, we need to measure the inside diameter. That's going to be pretty simple. Let's pull that out, find the largest measurement we can. Which here, looks like it's going to be 1.03. With that information, we'll be able to get the correct bearing, and the correct race, so they'll fit together properly and make a full bearing kit for us.Now here's the race, we're going to show you how to get this put back in. Basically just going to press fit inside of our hubs. We need to get it down on there. Kind of like that. And you'll have a couple options. A lot of times you're going to see do it yourself or at homer, just going to use a wooden block. Just place it on there. That's going to get you started, but at that point you'll struggle in getting it to go all the way down into it's seat.Now to take care of that problem, there are several seal drivers that are available. Seal and race drivers that are available out there on the market. It's designed to fit down inside of our race, inside of our hub and get it down there where it needs to go. This is part number ptw83020, has several different sizes, even if you have multiple trailers it's going to do the job.Now the side with the angle on it, is designed to fit down inside of our race. If we use the other side, that's going to be for driving your seal into place. Just want to hold it, and take it on in with your hammer. You'll see, you just want to insure that our race is all the way up against that line on the hub where it's supposed to mate to.Now when it comes time to pack your bearings you're going to have several different ways of doing this. You can just use your hand, is the traditional method. That's going to be the method probably reserved for the very occasional trailer work kind of situation. If you do it once or twice a year, probably get away with it that way.Next you would go to a, kind of a sandwich funnel style almost. If you look inside of there, you can see the bearing. It's located between the two pieces. Just use a grease gun. Start filling that with grease, and that's going to fill our bearing for us. And the third, with this one you're just going to place your bearing down and in. It should be pretty close to center. And then we've got our cone her that's going to go down and secure that.Now I think this style, wastes a little bit more grease than what this style will. This has a dust cap. You can see, you can keep your grease in there, put your dust cap on there and save it for later use. This will be if your going to do it every couple years. And this particular style would be if you're a more regular user.Let's start by showing you how to use a bearing packer. Similar to this. Again, we've just got our grease inaudible 00:11:07 here on the top. And then just slowly start to fill it. Now I like this style quite a bit. I think even regular users might enjoy it, because you can get a really quick visual look at that bearing. You're not going to have to overdo it, or have to much grease.You can kind of see in there now, we're starting to get grease to come out of it. Couple more pumps, we'll be good. You can see we've got grease coming out all the way around. Where all of our bearings are. Got a little bit of excess there. Just take that around the outside of it. And then we should be able to lift it off. And now you can see what we we're talking about. Just a little bit of excess there, that you're just going to wind up wasting.Now we'll take our bearing, we're going to place it right down in our race. And then we'll cap off the back with our seal. Right now our seal's going to fit in just like our race did. It's going to have a little bit of a pressure fit to it. Now very often in this situation, I see people using the four by four method. Kind of here, just placing that on and tapping it. As an option though, if you do have one of these. You can see that's designed to fit right on the top of the seal. And help drive it in.The biggest thing here is, just going to be getting it driven in squarely. You can see, this side's in a little bit further than this side. I'm going to start this side first. Now since we didn't have the opportunity to show you before, we're going to take a look at pulling a seal. Now this is a seal puller, we carry this on our website part number ptw1219. This is meant to hook underneath the seal. And then you kind of pull up on it, and just like our race you'll have to work all the way around that edge. Just bringing it out a little at a time.If you don't have that available. Another option would be a screwdriver. You just kind of get that under the seal, and turn it. And see, that'll allow you to also pop that out. We've taken care of our race. Our inner bearing. Our seal. The last component, before we put our hub back in place is going to be our outer bearing. Now with this bearing, I'll show you the hand packing method.This is definitely . Slightly dirtier method than the bearing packer. When we get grease on our hand we want to look at the larger side of the bearing. This is the smaller side. We have a larger side In between the inside and outside there's a gap. We can see our rollers in there. We want to grab that, and use that gap and shove grease inside of it. Now this is going to take a little bit, you want to work in the same spot until you get the grease pushed all the way through. We can see on the top there we've got a little bit starting to come through.And once we push it in the bottom, and you see it start coming out the of the top in those little drips, it's going to indicate that, that section's fully packed. Just need to work all the way around their outside edge now and do the same thing. Alright, once that's all the way around . The bearing will be ready for use.Now one more thing I like to do. We can see our inner bearing there, and our outer bearing. Well between the two, got a pretty big gap in there. If you'll take a . Pretty good amount of grease. We're just going to go all the way around. See how we can go all the way around the inside and just line that really well. The more grease we have in here, the less chance we have of any moisture getting in there, which can cause corrosion, rust, pitting. Pretty much things we do not like when it comes to bearings, races, and hubs.Put plenty of grease in there. And then this one does have the easy lube spindle, that'll even fill it in more. Now we can get our assembly slid on. I like to keep my thumbs on that outer bearing, just to prevent it from . inaudible 00:15:28 pushed off there. Now we can put on the original hardware that we removed, in taking off our hub the first time. In our case, we had our washer and our nut.Now most commonly you'll see pliers similar to this being used. We basically want to get that tightened down. Once it's fully tightened down you'll feel some resistance in the hub. We back it off just slightly. That'll give us a little bit more freedom of motion there. Something you don't want however . Is any movement in, or out on your hub. You want to be sure that everything is compressed, and you don't have what's called end play. Which would be the play in and out.Once we've got that set, then you'll put on whatever tight keeper yours came with. Get that put back in place. Now with an easy lube style hub, you're going to place your grease gun on the end, and then you can just fill the remainder of that hub up.Now for your typical applications, you're either going to have a solid cap, or a cap that'll have a rubber plug in it. A solid cap's going to be for an axle without the grease inaudible 00:16:51 here on the end. Goes on there. Just knock it on with your rubber mallet. Same with the one with the plug. Just gives you a removable area there, be able to cap that off.We'll show you how to put that on. Now as alternatives as well, a lot of times on boat trailers and marine kind of situations. You'll see a bearing buddy. This is going to apply a little bit of pressure on the grease, you'll fill it up. This kind of comes out just a little bit. That applies constant pressure on the grease to make sure we don't have any air, or anything like that. Then there is also an oil bath hub available. Now this is going to be for use with seals that are going to be designed specifically for oil bath use. You'll have to change that seal.We're using a double lip seal. There are also single lip seals available. Of course a double lip seal is going to give you just a little additional security. Keep that in mind when you order. But let's get this knocked on there now so you can see how that works. We just want to take the cap, we're going to center it. This is going to be very similar to what we did with the seal. And then just gently start tapping it around the outside. And it'll seep down on there for you.It's really going to be the same thing that you'll do with any of the end caps. Now with this side done, it's a good idea to take care of all the other hubs. Get them all on the same maintenance schedule. And as long as you'll periodically check the grease, take your trailer out for a trip occasionally. Just to keep everything lubricated. It should extend the life of these parts, and give us years of good service.

Customer Satisfaction Score:


Customer Reviews

10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals - Qty 2 - RG06-090

Average Customer Rating:  4.8 out of 5 stars   (238 Customer Reviews)


by:

I was having a delema with my axle seals on my 5th wheel, couldn't figure out what size they were due to lack of numbers on them. The crew at Etrailer was, is fantastic, I gave them the measurements using a micrometer and they quickly got me the right seals, and fit like a glove. Thank you very much Etrailer staff!!



by:

Seals arrived 3 days of original estimated delivery, this was much appreciated since my boat is unusable while the trailer is being repaired. These seals are special and etrailer had them in stock. They fit my Dexter axles on my Pacific trailer which have a slightly smaller hub seal diameter than most of the other trailers. They are also designed to handle both grease and oil bath systems, I'm converting to oil bath.

Steve S. profile picture

Steve S.

7/18/2023

Seals are still working fine in my oil bath system. I did a 2500 mile round trip a few months ago, no leaks.



by:

Excellent service and fast shipping. The grease seals are exactly what I needed for our travel trailer.



by:

worked well



by:

Received parts very quickly. Quality products. Very pleased. Had to replace pads due to easy lub system failure. Grease pumped in past seals and saturated pads was on and in everything. More cost effective to replace whole assembly. Assembly fit perfectly replacing lippert factory parts.



by:

Excellent service, and excellent product quality, and very excellent price
picture of new brake assembly from etrailer



by:

Perfect fit on my old axles and hubs.



by:

These double-lip grease seals are OK. I used them on my Kodiak hubs when I converted to an oil bath grease system. The shell is stamped metal which deforms slightly (dimples) when installing on hubs they have an interference fit. 3 out of the 4 hubs sealed fine. The 4th I used a much more expensive Timkin seal that has a sold metal insert to solve the dimpling problem, it worked better.



by:

Ordered seals for 303rls reflection last May. Rechecked site and reordered seals for 2.125 spindle vs 2.250 spindles. Not sure which is correct until I repack wheel bearings. . Don’t know if my error or not.



by:

Worked as expected. Just make sure you get the correct size.



by:

I was having a terrible time locating seals for my trailer so I went back to my Canadian supplier (Hitchweb) and without hesitation they gave me the contact info for etrailer. The parts person was knowledgeable and committed to find seals for my trailer. Shipping was very quick and the seals are a perfect match, thank you. I will definitely use etrailer again. Randy

Randy profile picture

Randy

6/16/2022

I use these on a 14’ dump trailer that is used weekly in all kinds of Canadian weather and am pleased to say these seals have held up very well with no leaks and we check them regularly as a safety plan.



by:

This is my third order from e-trailer and like the others I have been well pleased. I was having trouble finding these grease seals for my travel trailer but e-trailer had them in stock and at a reasonable price. I installed them and they fit perfectly. I would highly recommend this company.

Phil B. profile picture

Phil B.

5/18/2014

The grease seals are still doing what they are supposed to do. That is keep the grease where it is supposed to be. Not on the braking parts.Phil B.



by:

The bearings and seals were an exact fit and worked as expected. Teresa J. is very knowledgeable and helped me figure out the right parts, even though I did not have axle data tags to work with. I highly recommend etrailer and will order from them if I need any parts in the future.

Kent C. profile picture

Kent C.

4/17/2021

Everything is still working exactly as it should. I still consider this to be an all around great experience.



by:

I installed, and adjusted the 4-items : AKHD-655-6K drum assembles without any problems.
Also glad I ordered the extra RG06-090 seals with 2.125 diameter because they turned out to be the correct ones.
I highly recommend etrailer parts to anyone looking for good quality products.


Eugene G. profile picture

Eugene G.

6/23/2018

The AKHD-655-6K drum assembles are working just fine. Thanks for the quality product.



by:

Fit the drums perfectly



by:

Seals are like bearings , they're as good as they do their job. These look excellent and with proper installation and a perfect mating surface, they should keep the grease where it belongs.

Fit and installed as they should.

Chuck H. profile picture

Chuck H.

1/28/2015

These were installed in old hubs on new axles and with new bearings. The grease has stayed exactly where it belongs.



by:

Bought a used skid steer trailer that needed all new bearings and electric brakes. It was easy to find the correct bearing kit on etrailer and installation videos on the site made it a breeze for a DIY'er.



by:

This is the second time I have ordered these seals. Have been very pleased with the previous ones. They do what they are supposed to do, keep grease from getting on the brake liners.
I have ordered several items from etrailer, hitches, bike rack and other items. Have been very pleased with the prices and promt shipping. etrailer will continue to be my go to place whenever I need trailer parts or tow vehicle parts.

Phil B



by:

I gave part numbers and bearings are correct BUT grease seals are wrong (needed to be double lip seals and single seals came plus not right part number )

Jenny N. profile picture
Etrailer Expert

Jenny N.

11/1/2021

I will have our customer service team reach out to you.



by:

I am very happy with the etrailer team Prices are good as well as service, I have recommended your co. to several people in the Va,Nc area I can get product from you at a good price with good service and the free delivery is a plus also, I think your co. will continue grow with your current business plan. Can't loose with good service and a very competitive price. I just sold some of your parts to my neighbor and he had them delivered to my address 4 trailer wheels, Brakes for 4 wheels.



by:

Your company sent me the wrongs grease seals. I called and wrote emails only to have what I considered a burden placed on me. Pray tell why I am required to obtain a caliper to measure the sizes if the seals your company sent me? before my return can be processed further? I offered to return the seals you all sent but was told the shipping cost more than the seals were worth, How is that my issue or problem? Throughout all of this you folks still haven't made it right by me. What hoops will I have to jump through to spur someone into thinking and acting on this properly? These are clearly not the RG06-090 seals. So here is a thought. How about sending me the right seals and covering the cost to make it right? I am very upset that I am forced to explain basic customer service and remedy to you folks. Not to mention that no one on our end has lead the charge to fix this after a whole business week.



by:

Do what they should -- seal. Have placed about 4000 miles and 50 launches with hot bearings and no leaks. Gone are the days of milky oil and multiple changes/top ups each year.

Greg profile picture

Greg

3/16/2020

1 yr update: Still holding oil in and water out. Good purchase



by:

Seals fit perfectly.



by:

These seals worked well. Easy to install with no problems or leakage since installation.

Joe profile picture

Joe

10/26/2018

They have given me good service up to this point. I installed them on a 1972 travel trailer that I refurbished. Now I am a Glamper.



by:

Ordered everything I needed on a Sunday and even spoke with a person. Quick shipping to boot..


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Show More Reviews

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    The bearing part # 15123 is most commonly associated with the trailer hub part # 8-174-5UC3 which takes a grease seal of 10-10 part # RG06-090.
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  • Which Grease Seal is Used with Dexter Trailer Hub Assembly # 8-201-9UC3-EZ
    The seal that comes with hub # 8-201-9UC3-EZ is a 10-10 seal. For a pair use # RG06-090. These seals have an inner diameter of 2.125 inches and an outer diameter of 3.376. They are used with E-Z Lube and Oil 5,200, 6,000 and 7,000 LB Axles. I have included a link to a video review of the seal for you. I could not find a seal with the numbers you provided but if you have hub # 8-201-9UC3-EZ then the correct seals are # RG06-090. There is a 10-36 seal, # RG06-070. This seal has an inner...
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  • Replacement Hub/Drum and Braking Assemblies for 6K Dexter Axle Torflex EZ Lube Axles
    You are 99% of the way there! The Trailer Hub and Drum Assembly # AKHD-655-6-EZ-K is the correct replacement for your 8-201 Dexter Axle Hub/Drum Assemblies # 8-201-9UC3-EZ with the exception of the grease seal that comes with it. The Dexter Axle option has a 2.125" ID while the etrailer option has a 2.250" ID so you just need to swap out those seals for part # RG06-090 and our hub/drum kit will match perfectly! The Electric Trailer Brake Kit # AKEBRK-7-SA replaces your Dexter Electric...
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  • Replacement Hubs for 7,000 Pound Axle With 15123 Outer and 25580 Inner Bearings
    The answer to your question depends on the bolt pattern you need. We have one hub that actually uses a # 15123 bearing which is the # 8-174-5UC3. This has a 5-spoke utility bolt pattern. More than likely you have an 8 on 6-1/2 bolt pattern on your trailer. If that is the case you can use the # AKHD-865-7-1-K. The # 14125A outer bearing has the same 1.25" inner diameter so it will fit your spindle. However, I recommend measuring to find the inner diameter of your grease seal. The included...
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  • Will a 2-1/8 Inch Grease Seal Fit in Place of a 2-1/4 Inch Grease Seal for Hub # 8-201-51UC3-EZ
    The 2-1/4 and 2-1/8 grease seals are usually interchangeable but manufacturers have started going to the 2-1/8 model for a tighter fit. So what you would need is # GS-2125DL for one seal or # RG06-090 for a pair. We can't swap the seals out of a kit though so they would need to be purchased separately. the other option is to use regular hub and drum # 8-201-9UC3-EZ. It isn't galvanized but does come with the 2-1/8 inch seal.
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  • What Inner Diameter Does Grease Seal for 5,200 lb Trailer Axle Hub Have
    For trailer axles that have a capacity of between 5,200 and 7,000 lbs the grease seal requirement can be one of two options without any real rhyme or reason which is pretty frustrating. Sometimes the spindle will require the smaller diameter and other times it's the larger diameter. To verify what you'd need will require you to measure the spindle on your trailer or get the bearing number out of the hub currently.
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  • Is The Grease Seal # GS-2125DL Compatible With Oil Bath Filled Hubs?
    We do have the 10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals # RG06-090 which are rated for use as well with oil filled hubs. Our Grease Seal # GS-2125DL is only rated for use on grease filled hubs.
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  • Grease Seal Recommendation For 6,000 Lb Axle With Dexter Hub Assembly
    For a grease seal that is used with a Dexter 6,000 EZ Lube axle and hub assembly like part # 8-201-9UC3-EZ, you would need part # RG06-090. This comes with a quantity of 2 seals in the package. It has an inner diameter of 2.125 inches and an outer diameter of 3.376 inches.
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  • How to Determine Correct Grease Seal for Dexter 8-155 Trailer Hub
    In order to verify the correct grease seal for your Dexter 8-155 hub you will need to remove the hub from your spindle and measure the spindle where the grease seal rides, using a digital caliper that measures to the thousandths of an inch. We did have one customer replace his 8-155 hub with a hub that used Grease Seal # RG06-090 which has an inner diameter of 2.125 inches, so keep that in mind but you need to verify you have the same dimension on your spindle. I have added a link to...
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  • Replacement Grease Seal for 5,200 lb Dexter Torsion Axle
    The closest seal that we have to the 3.38" OD and 2.11" ID of your grease seal is part # GS-2125DL which has a 3.376" OD and a 2.125" ID. This is designed for Dexter 5,200 lb - 7,000 lb axles and the seal cross-reference number is 010-001-00. This seal comes in a set of 2 with part # RG06-090.
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  • Oil Lip Seal With 3.376 OD And 2.125 ID
    You said 3.376 x 2.125 od, but I believe you were referring to 3.376 inch outer diameter x 2.125 inch inner diameter. If so, we can indeed help and have the correct part for you with the following: - 10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seals # RG06-090 The # RG06-090 have those exact diameters, so they'll be exactly what you need.
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  • Replacement for Transcom 21334TC and 2133TB
    According to my research the Transcom part 21334TC is an oil seal with a 2.125" inner diameter and a 3.372" outer diameter and the Transcom part 2133TB is a grease seal with a 2.125" inner diameter and a 3.376" outer diameter. Generally speaking, a grease and oil seal cannot be replaced with one another. However, we do have one that can be used in both grease and oil, the 10-10 Grease or Oil Double-Lip Seal part # RG06-090. This should work as a replacement for both part 2133TB and part...
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  • Recommended Replacements for a Trailer Hub With an LM67048 Inner Bearing and LM11949 Outer Bearing
    It sounds like you have an agricultural style hub, like our part # AH15450ECOMP. In reality, replacement items are available for your current setup, but because you mention that this a boat trailer, your best option would really be to switch out to an EZ-Lube assembly. The current agricultural hub might hold up if you are just submerging them once or twice a season, but for repeated use you will really want to switch out the spindle, hub, and wheels. I would recommend going with EZ-Lube...
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  • Replacement Bearings for an AL KO 5,200 lb Axle
    The AL-KO 5,200 lb axle uses the inner bearing # 25580 and outer bearing part # 15123 and grease seal # RG06-090. For races you would want # 25520 and # 15245.
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  • Grease / Oil Seals 10-10 Double Lip Seals RG06-090 are the Same as National 470972
    Yes, the RG06-090 replaces the National 470972. On the product page we have a link to the cross-reference for the National part number.
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  • How to Determine the Correct Grease Seals for a Trailer with 6k AL-KO Axles
    The inner diameter of grease seal set # RG06-070 is 2.250 inches. Inner diameters are hard to measure because the rubber is flexible. Seal # RG06-090 you reference is slightly smaller at 2.124 inner diameter. To determine if this is the correct seal I would need to know the inner and outer bearing numbers stamped into the metal of the bearings.
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Info for this part was:

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