Caveman
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Eric
- Joined
- Aug 17, 2022
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 87
- Reaction score
- 64
- Location
- Jonesboro, AR; Athens, AL
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Sport S Max Tow; 1994 YJ; 07 KLR 650; 97 Triumph T509; 77 BMW R100S
- Thread starter
- #16
Interesting to hear a few others have had similar experiences! My 2020 was built 8/19, and it truly is an open differential, not a LSD. Over the phone, the off-road shop guy did say he thought it was likely the pinion bearing. Depending on how far he has to get into things, I am considering an Eaton E-locker if I'm already in for a fairly serious teardown. Thanks for the link to the tapered bearing upgrade kit. I will definitely bring that up with the shop when I take it in later today. Thanks also to the poster who supplied the TruTrac link. I'll have a look at that as well.
I'm sure I did sign a diagnostic at the dealer. What ticks me off is I didn't get a diagnosis beyond the one I walked in with: metal in the rear diff. I would have liked to have been told up front: "if there is metal in your diff, all we are prepared to do is replace the whole unit." Barring that, I would have preferred they'd have saved my (new, but likely contaminated) gear oil to put back in so I could drive the few more miles to the gear shop on a diff they declined to repair without paying $75/quart for their gear oil! In all fairness, they refused to do that up front, but that lack of flexibility on their part ended up costing me. I wouldn't put possibly contaminated gear oil in a repaired diff, but I would have had no issue pouring it back into one that had just been opened and closed up again without any repair.
I'm sure I did sign a diagnostic at the dealer. What ticks me off is I didn't get a diagnosis beyond the one I walked in with: metal in the rear diff. I would have liked to have been told up front: "if there is metal in your diff, all we are prepared to do is replace the whole unit." Barring that, I would have preferred they'd have saved my (new, but likely contaminated) gear oil to put back in so I could drive the few more miles to the gear shop on a diff they declined to repair without paying $75/quart for their gear oil! In all fairness, they refused to do that up front, but that lack of flexibility on their part ended up costing me. I wouldn't put possibly contaminated gear oil in a repaired diff, but I would have had no issue pouring it back into one that had just been opened and closed up again without any repair.
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