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Parts for your 2007 Subaru Tribeca-Wheel hubs
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2007 Subaru Tribeca wheel hubs — what they do and how to look after them
Wheel hubs are absolutely fitted to the 2007 Subaru Tribeca. Technical sources that document this include the Subaru Tribeca (2007 MY) Service Manual (Front/Rear Axle and Drive Shaft System sections) which specifies unitised hub-and-bearing assemblies at each corner, the Subaru FAST electronic parts catalogue listing complete front and rear hub assemblies for this model, and major bearing manufacturers’ catalogues (e.g., Timken, SKF, MOOG) that provide direct-replacement hub units for the 2007 Tribeca. These sources confirm the vehicle uses sealed, bolt-in hub units with integrated wheel bearings and ABS encoder rings.
On a Tribeca, the wheel hub carries the wheel studs, holds the brake rotor true, houses the sealed bearing, and mates to the CV axle (front) so the wheel can spin smoothly while the ABS system reads wheel speed. Being a sealed unit, it’s maintenance-light, but when a hub wears out it’s replaced as an assembly rather than rebuilt.
Signs it’s time to sort the hubs on a 2007 Tribeca include:
- A steady humming or growling that gets louder with road speed and often changes when gently weaving at highway pace.
- Play at the wheel when rocked at 12 and 6 o’clock, uneven tyre wear, or a faint vibration.
- ABS light on due to a failed encoder ring or sensor issue at the hub.
During regular servicing (say every 10,000–15,000 km), they should:
- Check for noise on a road test and wheel play on a hoist.
- Inspect for rust jacking or damage at the hub-to-knuckle face and rotor mounting face.
- Confirm ABS sensor wiring and connectors are tidy and intact.
When replacement’s needed, a technician will remove the caliper and rotor, disconnect the ABS lead, loosen the axle nut (front), unbolt the hub from the knuckle, clean the mating surfaces, then fit the new unit. Correct torque on the axle nut and wheel nuts is critical—always follow the Subaru workshop specs and use a torque wrench. Choosing a quality hub with the correct magnetic encoder for Subaru ABS is a must, cheap units can trigger nuisance ABS faults. Hubs can seize in the knuckle on higher‑kilometre cars, so expect penetrating oil, patience, or a hub puller. Replacement in pairs isn’t mandatory, but on high‑mileage Tribecas it’s often sensible to do both fronts or both rears together to keep road noise and handling consistent.
Technical references: Subaru Tribeca 2007 Service Manual (Front/Rear Axle, Drive Shaft System), Subaru FAST EPC (hub assembly listings), bearing supplier catalogues listing unitised hub assemblies for 2007 Tribeca.
Popular questions about 2007 Subaru Tribeca wheel hubs
How long do wheel hubs typically last on a 2007 Tribeca?
With decent roads and regular servicing, many Tribeca hubs run well past 150,000 km. Harsh potholes, heavy loads, oversized wheels, and water intrusion can shorten that. If there’s humming that scales with speed or play at the wheel, it’s time for a check.
Rotating tyres on schedule, keeping wheel nuts correctly torqued, and addressing brake drag helps hubs live longer.
Do the hubs need to be replaced in pairs?
Not strictly. If only one hub is noisy or loose, replacing that side is fine. That said, if the vehicle has high kilometres and similar wear on both sides, doing hubs in pairs (front or rear) can save time and keep noise and feel balanced.
Always confirm the side with a proper road test and on‑hoist inspection before ordering parts.
Can the bearing be repacked, or is it a complete hub swap?
It’s a sealed, unitised hub and bearing assembly—there’s no repacking or pressing new rollers like the old days. When the bearing’s gone, the whole hub assembly is replaced.
This design is reliable, quick to fit, and ensures correct preload, provided the axle nut and mounting fasteners are torqued to Subaru spec.