Oil is always a better lubricant than grease, in all circumstances - it flows back between moving parts, where grease can be permanently displaced, leaving an interface between surfaces unprotected.
Grease should only used where oil cannot be kept in place - and the problem with wheel bearings is that if you use grease, you do not know whether the seals are working properly (with oil you know if they are leaking!).
The Landrover setup (Series/Defender etc) was originally designed to use oil, and wheel bearings were only changed to grease when preventing oil leaks became a higher priority than providing good lubrication.
Wheel bearing failures only became a common problem after the change to greased bearings, some time in the nineties, from memory. (Series 2a changed to specify initial lubrication with grease rather than oil, deleting the filler plug on the drive flange, but they still remained oil lubricated as there was no seal between the swivel or axle oil and the wheel bearings).
In my case, I have never replaced wheel bearings on either my 2a (I have owned it for nearly twenty years) or my 110, which has now done over 500,000km, of which I have done over 400,000. Both are, of course, oil lubricated, as they were from new.
The problem with oil lubrication is that it depends on good seals and sealing surfaces - and this means fairly frequent seal replacement - but at least you know when they are leaking; with grease the seals can let let water in and you don't know until the bearings fail. A further problem with grease lubrication is that it means there is a good chance of the spline between the drive flange and axle running dry, and wearing rapidly, sometimes to the extent of failure, something that is almost unheard of with oil lubricated bearings.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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