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  1. Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps
  2. Dexter
  3. Seals
  4. Grease Seals - Double Lip
  5. 2.561 Inch O.D.
  6. 1.687 Inch I.D.
Double Lip Seal for 3,700-lb Marine Hubs

Double Lip Seal for 3,700-lb Marine Hubs

Item # 168255TB
Our Price: $13.01
Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps
Shipping Weight: 0.08 lbs
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Dexter 1.687 Inch I.D. Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps - 168255TB
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Double lip grease seal fits Dexter 3,700-lb marine axles. Great Prices for the best trailer bearings races seals caps from Dexter. Double Lip Seal for 3,700-lb Marine Hubs part number 168255TB can be ordered online at etrailer.com or call 1-800-940-8924 for expert service.
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  • Reviews (147)
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  • Videos (2)
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Dexter Trailer Bearings Races Seals Caps - 168255TB

  • Seals
  • Grease Seals - Double Lip
  • 2.561 Inch O.D.
  • 1.687 Inch I.D.
  • Dexter

Double lip grease seal fits Dexter 3,700-lb marine axles.


Features:

  • Fits Dexter 3,700-lb marine axles
  • Inner diameter: 1.687"
  • Outer Diameter: 2.561"
  • Quantity: 1 double lip seal


010-168-00 Dexter Double Lip Seal for 3.7K Marine Hubs

Replaces 158755 and 168255TB





Video of Double Lip Seal for 3,700-lb Marine Hubs

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




Video Transcript for Trailer Bearings Races Seals and Caps Rebuild

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

Double Lip Seal for 3,700-lb Marine Hubs - 168255TB

Average Customer Rating:  4.8 out of 5 stars   (147 Customer Reviews)

Double lip grease seal fits Dexter 3,700-lb marine axles.

by:

The hub that was sent the inner bearings do not fit. The old hub bearings and the new hub bearings are identical same numbers even. Even if I had been given the correct hub the new bearings do not fit in the inner hub?? I did call And one of the customer service people helped me through confirming this she gave me her extension. I left her a message she was helpful.



by:

Order was easy and received quickly and would have gratefully provided a 5 star rating until I opened the box.
I ordered 4 bearings clearly marked in their boxes. I also ordered 6 seals. These seal were in a zip lock bag without part numbers or any markings. I had to use a digital caliper to identify seals.



by:

The seals look to be a well built quality product. I will be installing them the next time I repack my hubs.

Steve

5/2/2024

Ive had these seals installed on my trailer for over a year now and havent had any issues with them. Im very satisfied.



by:

I converted a boat trailer into a flatbed ATV/UTV trailer. My boat trailer has some different seal dimensions than a normal 3500# axle. These seals saved the day and fit perfectly into standard 3500# hubs for my trailer. Thanks!

Mary

3/19/2014

Trailer works perfectly thanks to you guys!Whenever I need a trailer part, I look to you guys first.



by:

always purchase bearings and seals here for my saltwater double axle trailer. the fit and ride well . good product



by:

I trailer my boat every weeks down to shore 60 miles each way with no experience grease leak inner end axle. When the end of fishing season remove wheel during inspection both inner seal look great definitely seal to shop for



by:

Not even close to the correct size ordered. the item irdeted clearly say outer diameter of 2.56…the items received were 3.37 in outer diameter. Very dissatisfied.

Etrailer Expert

Jenny N.

11/28/2022

Oh my, I am sorry that we have sent you the wrong seal. Customer Service will be in touch to assist you.



by:

Excellent, fits great! Thanks for the quick shipping.



by:

Excellent Products and Services.



by:

Great product, great price and expedient delivery!



by:

Order was filled very quickly with an expected delivery of 5 days. Seals arrived in 3 days and are exactly what I needed! Excellent service!

Thomas F.

8/5/2023

Great! No issues and very happy with quality of bearings and seals.



by:

Thank you Jessica for steering me to the correct parts that fit my obsolete hubs! Everything worked out great. And thanks for following up with delivery status info. You are wonderful to work with!



by:

Perfect fit for my 2000 EZ Loader tandem axle trailer and Skeeter.

eTrailer, if you're listening, please become a trailer parts expert that has a cross reference listing for trailer parts by manufacturer. I asked if this was the right seal and was told to pull the old seal for the part number on it. The problem was I suspected that the hub had the wrong seal on it, which I confirmed when I replaced it with this part. Using the part number from the existing seal would not have fixed the problem in this case. I had to do my own leg work and find the most likely candidate for the correct seal and take the gamble that I had the right one. Glad my research was correct. Please build your own cross reference of the major manufacturers so that you can be the expert in all things trailer. You have the other stuff covered.

Etrailer Expert

Patrick B.

9/12/2014

Seals are kind of a pain. Even if a cross-reference sheet was built which is difficult because seals dont use common part numbers like bearings, if the incorrect seal was used like in your case, the cross-reference would only direct you to another incorrect seal. The absolute best way to determine which seal is needed is to measure 2 things with a dial caliper. Measure the seal surface on the spindle, that will give you the seal ID. Measure the diameter of the seal surface on the hub and that will give you the OD of the seal. With the ID and OD of the seal, it becomes very easy to find the seal, even on our site.

Ed P.

3/21/2015

Correction to my original review. I had one hub that was replaced on my trailer before I acquired it. This seal worked for that hub, but not the original hubs.



by:

No part number on my boat trailer seal. I measured inside and outside diameters with a digital caliper and it was really simple to match it up at etrailer.com. It fit perfectly. Price was great and delivery time was extremely fast.

James

6/6/2017

No problems at all!



by:

I had a hub and bearing go out on a boat trailer going down the road. Tried matching separate parts locally, but were not available. Was able to order all the parts from etrailer at one time. They had on hand and shipped right away. Parts were exactly what I was looking for. Perfect fit. Now if I would have known that the other side would have failed in the next 12 months I would have done them all at the same time.



by:

Looks like it will be more durable than the one I removed.



by:

great product at a good price



by:

Everything was as ordered. Grease Seal part number 168255tb was the same seal included in bearing kit BK2-100.
The description of 168255tb was not the same as the description in kit BK2-100.

I would not have wasted my money on the 2 extra seals if I would have know they were the same

Etrailer Expert

Victoria B.

3/27/2020

The seal that comes in the BK2-100 kit has a slightly larger diameter than this seal, and that kit typically fits a 3.5K axle. This 168255TB seal is designed specifically for Dexters 3.7K Marine axle.



by:

These grease seals were the last thing I needed to rebuild my 3500 lb trailer axle. When they arrived I was pleased to find that the inside diameter fit perfectly on the axle and the outside diameter fit into the wheel hub snuggly. They were easy to install and looked much stronger then the original.



by:

These were hard to find, odd size I guess. etrailer came through with quick shipping and they fit perfect. Holding up well so far.

Paul S.

10/13/2017

Perfect. Have held up over a number of long trips.



by:

This is the only seal I found that would actually seal around my trailer axle. I have a 18ft Trailstar boat trailer. Its been about a year since I installed the seals and haven’t had any issues.



by:

I replaced three old seals in the last one year with these in my twin axle EZ Loader trailer . All of them are holding on well till date. Keeps the grease inside the hub and no leaks found. Works with SS sleeve, in addition.



by:

So far, so good. Delivery was fast. The seals are a good fit for my boat trailer and seem to be of good quality. The last seals I used were single-lip and did not do a good job of keeping the water out and the grease in. I am hoping these double-lip seals will be better. I'll know in a year or so how well they work.



by:

Well hello, I dont do many reviews but I will have to say that the people at etrailer are very nice and very easy to deal with and they know there business for sure , I havent installed my parts yet and they arrived dead on time and I knew every step the parts made along the way to me . So far I am very pleased and that is hard to do with me as 99 percent of the time nothing is ever the way suppliers say it going to be until now with etrailer , very nice job guys and thank you and I will be installing everything this weekend and will do another review and will have some pics along the way, And by the way thank ou for keeping the prices affordable for us out here in the field trying to keep our equipment rolling and safe , with your prices no reason to be able to do just that , again great job guys .



by:

Perfect fit, high quality.


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Show More Reviews

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    Converting an oil bath hub to grease couldn't be simpler. Just drain the oil, clean and inspect the bearings and races and pack the bearings with a good quality grease like the LMX # L11390. The # 168255TB seal you mentioned is typically used by 3700 lb marine hubs which use a # L68149 and # L44649 bearing and a # L68110 and # L44610 race. We offer the replacement races, seals and bearings if you need them.
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  • Correct Replacement Bearings and Seals for 2006 EZ Loader Boat Trailer With 3,500 Lb Oil Bath Axle
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    view full answer...
  • Double Lip Grease Seal for a 3,500 lbs Boat Trailer with About 1.67" Spindle Measurement
    It definitely sounds like you have the wrong seals, especially if they are barely making contact. I believe the seal you are looking for is part # 168255TB which is a double lip seal with the spring on the primary lip typically used for 3,700 lb marine hubs. It has an inner diameter of 1.687" and an outer diameter of 2.561". You need to measure both where it rides on the spindle as well as where it sits on your hub to ensure that it fits properly. If you have a different measurement than...
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  • Replacement Hubs, Wheels, and Tires for a Boat Trailer That Uses Dico 45263 Hubs
    I was able to get a hold of Pacific Boat Trailers and find out which bearings and seals you would need, but unfortunately the seal that is used on a Dico 45263 hub is different than standard 5 on 4-1/2 hubs that use the bearing numbers they gave me. The bearings are standard as it uses Inner Bearing # L44649, and Outer Bearing # L68149. The seal that is used for a Dico 45263 hub is # 168255TB. The inner diameter of the seal is 1.687 inches while the outer diameter of the seal is 2.561...
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  • How To Find Correct Idler Hub For 2004 EZ loader Boat Trailer With 2,999LB Axle Capacity
    There are 2 ways to figure out exactly what you need Chris as I cannot look up parts for your 2004 EZ Loader boat trailer based on just a model. If you have the VIN you or I can contact EZ Loader to verify the correct bearings and seals used on your current hubs or you can pull a hub off and get the part numbers off the parts. If the part numbers are not visible you could also measure the spindle using a Caliper # PTW80157. Based on the axle weight you most likely have the #84 spindle...
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  • Replacement Grease Seal For Kodiak Disc Brakes To Fit Spindle With 1.68"
    You will need to replace the 1.71" ID Seal # 58846 which came on your Kodiak Disc Brake Kit # KOD59FR with the 1.68" ID Seal # 168255TB. The larger seal would allow grease to escape and moisture and dirt to get inside the hub and damage the bearings.
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  • How to Pick Out a Replacement Trailer Grease Seal
    Since the inner diameter of a grease seal is soft rubber it can be hard to get an exact measurement of it, or if it has worn out it may not be accurate. The best recommendation I could make would be to get the outer diameter of where the grease seal rides on your spindle. We do have a seal that has an outer diameter of 2.561 like you said you need. Check out part # 168255TB. This seal has an inner diameter of 1.687 inches. There might also be a number stamped on the outside of your grease...
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  • How To Figure Out the Correct Replacement Hubs for EZ Loader Boat Trailer
    In order to find the correct replacement hubs for your EZ Loader boat trailer you will need to take apart your current hub assembly and look at the bearings themselves; wipe away the grease and you should be able to see the part number stamped directly on them. If you are unable to find them, you would need to use a digital caliper and measure your spindle to the thousandths of an inch where the bearings ride. You can use the photo I've attached to see exactly where you need to measure....
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  • Replacement Hub for DICO 45264
    Yes, the CE Smith Trailer Hub part # CE13511 will fit as a replacement for your DICO hub 45264 but you will need to use a different seal as we have found that your spindle diameter is slightly different which means you need the # 168255TB as well.
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  • Hadco 3077 Grease Seal Replacement Recommendation
    Your Hadco 3077 grease seal should have an outer diameter of 2.56 inches and an inner diameter close to 1.74 inches. Based on that the seal part # 168255TB should be a fit. The outer diameter is 2.561 inches and the inner diameter is 1.687 inches. You will want to double check these dimensions with your current seal to determine if this will fit. Since inner diameter on seals can be hard to nail down you might want to measure the outer diameter of the spindle where the seal rides.
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  • Replacement Bearings, Races, Grease Seal and Hydraulic Drum Brakes For a 2006 EZ Loader Boat Trailer
    The Hydraulic Trailer Brake Kit # AKFBBRK-35 includes both right and left hand 10" hydraulic brake assemblies for your 2006 EZ Loader boat trailer. These are free backing brakes that will not fully engage when backing your trailer up. The Inner Hub Bearing # L68149 and Race # L68111, Outer Hub Bearing # L44649 and Race # L44610 are the correct replacements for your hub. A Grease Seal # 168255TB will be needed as the original seal will most likely be damaged when removed to access the...
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  • Availability of Replacement for 17255TB Grease Seal
    According to the Cross Reference information I found online, the correct replacement for the seal you mentioned is # RG06-050, but the inside diameter at 1.719 is a little larger than what you stated. Try using a digital caliper like # PTW80157 to measure the diameter of the spindle where the grease seal rides to confirm that ID you mentioned. Also, are you fully confident in the 17255TB number you found? We have a replacement seal, part # 168255TB that's closer in size to what you'd mentioned.
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  • Replacement Bearing Components For Boat Trailer With Races L44610, L68110 and AD2528E Grease Seal
    While we do have all the components that you are needing for your boat trailer we currently do not have a kit with all these components. Be sure to order one of each per hub on your trailer. Outer Bearing # L44649 Outer Race # L44610 Inner Bearing # L68149 Inner Race # L68110 Grease Seal # 168255TB Cotter Pin # 165649 Spindle Washer # 5-101 The NOK AD2528E seals show a size of 2.56 outer diameter and 1.688 inner diameter, the Grease Seal # 168255TB is 2.561 outer diameter and 1.687"...
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  • Replacement Idler Hubs For Boat Trailer With UFP Hub and 1.68 Grease Seals
    You are going to have to get the Grease Seal # 168255TB and replace the seal included with either the Easy Grease # AKIHUB-545-35-G-EZ-K or Standard Hub # AKIHUB-545-35-G-K. We do not have any hub kits which come with the 1.68" inner diameter seal as a kit currently. Both the hubs above are galvanized so they will last longer on your boat trailer since they are more corrosion resistant than a standard painted hub.
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  • Picking Out Replacement Grease Seals for Chicago Rawhide 16754
    To pick out a replacement grease seal you will need to measure the diameter of the spindle where the grease seal rides with a digital or dial caliper like # PTW80157 and then need to measure the hub bore where the current seal rides. With those two dimensions we can pick out the correct seal that you would need. We've heard your dimensions are 1.688 X 2.562 X 0.25 which means the seal you'd need is the part # 168255TB. I attached a link to a page that has all of the grease seals we carry....
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  • Bearings, Races and Grease Seal For a TDE 46845 Hub On a 5 Starr Boat Trailer
    We have found your TDE46845 hub uses a Inner Bearing # L68149, Outer Bearing # L44649 and Grease Seal # 168255TB. While we do not have these in a specific kit you can order 4 of each to work on your trailer. Do be sure to change out the Inner Race # L68111 and Outer Race # L44610 when you change the bearings. We have the Seal Puller # PTW1219 and Install Kit # PTW83020 which will make removal and installation of the seals and races easier. We also have the Grease # L11390 that I recommend...
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