The cost of the wheel plus tax was less than $15. Took about 10 minutes to replace and grease and much of that time was going up and down the basement stairs and finding the correct size wrenches.
Must have hit a stump that ripped out the zerk fitting.
If it's a machinable plastic I could easily replace the old zerk fitting with a slightly larger one. I'll keep the old wheel and use it as a paper weight until I need it.
Easy to replace with the new one and the new one was relatively inexpensive.
My old style Gage wheels don’t have grease fittings. But after 22 years, I only replaced them one time a number years ago.
I think the biggest issue is setting them properly for whatever height you plan to cut at.
No expert here but I set mine properly according to the manual and it seems to look like they will be good for another number of years.
I think the biggest problem is that people don’t set them properly for the cutting height they’re using, and therefore they turn into ground contact height wheels, and wear out rather quickly.
I could be off base on this, but it wouldn’t be the first time and I accept that!