I am well aware of my mechanical & engineering background/experience.
Is this a statement saying you are an engineer, or a statement saying that you are no engineer?
Maybe you could explain to me why every time I check the hub temps on deuces it typically shows a temp of at least 10° higher reading on the right rears.
Not just one truck, not just my trucks.
I suspect that you are a busy guy, like most of us, and your actual sample set is very limited. I explain the difference you have measured as being anecdotal. By pure chance, you have measured one or two trucks that have the right side axle bearings/seals/grease/brakes setup so they are higher friction than the left side... hence the higher temperature.
Then explain why an open differential on flat even ground will spin the right rear & not the left rear. Then flip things around and wonder why the left front does it when the front axle is engaged.
The answers to question 2 & 3 were stated in my earlier post.
That one is simple to explain. The drive shaft is delivering torque from the engine/transmission to the rear axles. If we assume the engine turns clockwise, that torque will cause a torque lift on the right rear wheels, and will provide a similar amount of extra pressure on the left rear wheels. In a slippery situation, that will cause the right wheel to spin.
Compare/contrast that to carrying a load on a truck like a deuce. The torque lift might put a few hundred extra pounds on the left tire vs the right. My experience with trucks has shown that there is no extra heating in the axles with the truck empty vs fully loaded. The bearings just don't care about the weight in the back of the truck.
but according to you guys, apparently my laser thermometer just like playing games.
No, I think your laser thermometer is a disinterested party, and is just reporting the facts. I think you are doing the typical human thing of extrapolating one experience onto the entire population of trucks.
because there could be no way that a hub under a load from pushing could get warmer than one that is coasting, eh? ( <----sarcasim )
That is correct, not measurably so.
-Chuck