Oh man, PLEASE if there are ANY doubts, change 'em!
Sometime in November, when I was building towards enough bucks for a Gear Vendors OverDrive, I was doing about 80 on a highway right next to a magnet wall.
I didn't hear the left rear bearing seize.
For some reason they don't scream like front ones usually do.
It heated up, boiled off the grease, annealed the steel, melted the seized bearings and cut the outter axle in half like a dull bit on a lathe.
The rear wheel assembly, including rotor and caliper broke off and jettisoned away from the car, apparently bouncing off the magnet wall not a foot away. I felt a tremendous shock, like I had run over a "cinder-block" and the wheel pulled sharply to the left towards the wall.
I didn't hit the wall at all.
Thinking I had just had a bad blow out, I wasn't about to stop in the left lane of crowded traffic only to be rear-ended by some
other moron going 70+ 15 secs later, so I turned on the signals, looked right and started going across, still at 60+.
The wheel was pulling hard to the left, but not so bad you couldn't control it. I remember being suprised the road hogs were letting me over. Right before I got to the right lane (and this is about 300+ yards after "the event" - we call these things "events", you know
) a bad shimmy started.
Assuming I was starting to loose the tire off the rim of the flat, I did what you do in such a case and gave it a little power to straighten it out. It worked! I stopped slowing and I
think accelerated slightly. The wheel pulled even harder to the left when I did it, but still not uncontrollably.
I continued across the final, right-most lane and this time actually looked back in the rearveiw and not just sideways for traffic and was shocked to see a white wall of sparks. It looked like the space shuttle coming in!
I couldn't believe I had eaten through the tire that fast. I got it off the road, very concerned about a potential fuel leak being ignited by this shower of sparks.
I stopped it, realized it wasn't enough off the road and started it forward a little more, steering hard to the right, making a horrible grinding noise.
It was only after I had shut off the car, waited a few seconds, let go of the fire extiguisheer I had grabbed as soon as I was stopped (the first time) that I realized I was sitting
way too low on the driver rear!
Having that repaired, with no 'glass damage and no center section damage - and little ancillary damage to the suspension at all, with only a few unrelated extras or minor convenient area upgrades thrown in, cost me almost $4500.
I was, other than financially,
very lucky. I will get those things changed every other day and twice on Sundays! I want a thermal monitoring systems for them!!!
The bearings on the rear are not like the tapered bearing on the front that you can get on and off with hammers, simple press arrangements and freezing or baking parts. They are specific fixed diameter parts, that have to be put on under force to specific depths and not more.
Most people who lose a wheel lose a lot more than I did. Don't neglect those bearings.