Your Selected Vehicle
Parts for your 2023 Suzuki Splash-Wheel hubs
Explore 4WD & Adventure
2023 Suzuki Splash wheel hubs — purpose, fitment, and servicing advice
Based on technical sources including the Suzuki Splash/Ritz factory service manual (front suspension and brake sections), the Suzuki Electronic Parts Catalogue (EPC), and professional data sets such as Autodata and HaynesPro, the 2023 Suzuki Splash is fitted with wheel hubs. The front axle uses a unitised hub and bearing assembly on the MacPherson strut, and the rear uses an integrated hub/bearing with either drum or disc brakes depending on market spec. So, wheel hubs are definitely relevant to this vehicle.
The wheel hub is the central mounting point for the wheel and brake rotor/drum, housing the sealed bearing and, on ABS-equipped cars, the tone ring or encoder for the speed sensor. On the Splash, the hub keeps the wheel running true, supports vehicle load, and allows smooth rotation with minimal friction. Because the bearing is sealed-for-life, there’s no greasing to do, care is all about inspection and correct fitment when replacements are needed.
As part of regular servicing, a mechanic will check for play, roughness, or noise in the hub/bearing. With the wheel off the ground, any grumbling, rumbling, or notchiness while spinning points to bearing wear. Excessive free play, uneven tyre wear, or an ABS warning light can also hint at hub issues.
- Telltale signs: humming that rises with road speed, a droning that changes when cornering, heat at the hub after a short drive, or ABS faults from a damaged encoder ring.
- Common causes: pothole strikes, water ingress after pressure washing, incorrect wheel or axle-nut torque, and low-quality replacement parts.
Replacement is straightforward for a trained tech but does require the right tools. On the front, the unitised hub/bearing is replaced as an assembly, on the rear, the hub is swapped complete with its bearing (and often the drum on drum-brake versions). It’s essential to use new hardware where specified, torque the axle/stub nuts exactly to Suzuki data, and avoid pressing through the bearing races, which can kill a fresh hub before it leaves the hoist.
- Practical tips: choose OEM or reputable aftermarket hubs, keep the ABS sensor and encoder clean, avoid directing high-pressure water at the hub area, and recheck torque after initial kilometres if the procedure allows.
- Service interval: there’s no fixed kilometre interval—replace on condition. Early diagnosis keeps tyres, brakes, and fuel economy in good nick.
Done properly, a fresh hub restores quiet cruising and precise steering feel, which is exactly what Splash owners in Aus and NZ expect for city runs and open-road trips alike.
Popular questions about 2023 Suzuki Splash wheel hubs
1) How can someone tell which wheel hub is noisy on a 2023 Suzuki Splash?
A road test is a good start: a steady hum that gets louder with speed and changes when gently weaving often points to the loaded side (noise grows when loading the failing bearing). On a hoist, spinning each wheel by hand and listening with a mechanic’s stethoscope helps. Tyre cupping can mimic hub noise, so rotating tyres front to rear is a handy cross-check.
If there’s ABS, scan for wheel-speed sensor signal dropouts. A damaged encoder ring within the hub can flag the culprit even before the bearing gets truly loud.
2) Do the Splash’s wheel hubs need regular greasing?
No. The Splash uses sealed-for-life hub/bearing units, so there’s no greasing point. Maintenance is inspection-based—check for noise, play, heat, and ABS faults, and ensure correct torque on wheel and axle/stub nuts during brake or suspension work.
If replacement is required, fit quality parts, avoid impacts on the inner race, and follow Suzuki torque specs to the letter to maximise service life.
3) How long do wheel hubs typically last and what affects lifespan?
Many last well beyond 150,000 km, but harsh roads, potholes, kerb strikes, cheap tyres with high noise, and water or salt exposure can shorten life. Incorrect torque or press-fit technique during prior work is another big factor.
Choosing OEM or premium aftermarket hubs, keeping tyres correctly inflated and aligned, and avoiding water blasting directly at the hub area all help the Splash’s hubs go the distance.