We revisit early suggestions to observe spin-charge separation in cold-atom settings in the time domain by studying one-dimensional repulsive Fermi gases in a harmonic potential, where pulse perturbations are initially created at the center of the trap. We analyze the subsequent evolution using Generalized Hydrodynamics (GHD), which provides an exact description, at large space-time scales, for arbitrary temperature T , particle density, and interactions. At T = 0 and vanishing magnetic field, we find that, after a non-trivial transient regime, spin and charge dynamically decouple up to perturbatively small corrections which we quantify. In this limit, our results can be understood based on a simple phase-space hydrodynamic picture. At finite temperature, we solve numerically the GHD equations, showing that for low T > 0 effects of spin-charge separation survive, and characterize explicitly the value of T for which the two distinguishable excitations melt.