Originally Posted By: artbuc
Notchy is a good word. I have a 99 Toy Avalon FWD w/95k miles. The rear wheel hubs do not have any play but they are definitely notchy. Off the car, it feels like the ball bearings have flat spots when you rotate by hand and you can hear it. They are hard to rotate but that could just be the right amount of preload. I've nver rotated a new assembly so I don't know what it should feel like. One of the hubs has been leaking grease. There is a wet spot on the bottom with the usual build-up of grime. Must be a bad seal.
I'm guessing at 95k I should replace both hubs. Agree?
Any time a sealed hub doesn't rotate smoothly, it should be replaced IMO. The resistance to turning can be surprisingly stiff (new bearings/seals) or can be VERY free (high mileage) but as long as it rotate SMOOTHLY, the resistance to turning isn't important.
Its also best to strip off the wheel, caliper, and rotor when assessing a bearing hub, too. I had a "bad bearing" grumble on the Cherokee a few weeks ago and the quick check of jacking it up , turning the wheel, and feeling for vibration in the coil spring didn't reveal anything unusual and the assembly seemed to be smooth-turning. The sound kept getting worse, though, so I pulled the wheel- but the caliper drag still masked any roughness. I then pulled off the caliper and I could *just* begin to feel something suspicious when I turned the rotor. Pulled the rotor- felt more roughness. When I finally had the hub off and disconnected from the front half-shaft spline, it was *very* clearly bad- as you said felt like the bearings all had flat spots.