TheSolarWizard
Well-Known Member
- Thread starter
- #1
I apologize if this has been covered. I just placed an order for a Dana 60/80 combo so these are pretty specific asks id think.
I just spoke to my chosen axle builder and im definitely excited but my bank likely believes my identity has been stolen at this point
1) he recommended I lock the front hubs and just drive around in 4wd to build some heat in the gears as I brake in the rear, go ahead and change the fluid after following procedures for 500 miles and that should suffice and also strongly recommend I roll around hubs locked for at least 100 miles once a month thereafter to avoid seals drying out and causing a leak. Ive never heard that last part before any input there?
2) he recommended I only run Lucas non synthetic 85w-140 or 75w-140 Amsoil. they build axles for the military and they all run the Lucas. the axles ship dry. any thoughts on initial break in choice and then fill going forward? the jeep will be exposed to super hot deserts and hi altitude super cold. no towing of any significance.
3) just before we got off the phone he offered a solid upgrade to lightweight brakes to help offset some of the monster axle weight, eliminated the mushy pedal one ton brakes typically exhibit and dramatically improve performance so I went ahead and did it.
In my track days upgrading brakes meant a series of stops so I understand the concept but I don't understand if doing so in this application is impacted at all by the fact that I am also braking in gears concurrently.
tossing in a pic because the scale here is almost laughable
I just spoke to my chosen axle builder and im definitely excited but my bank likely believes my identity has been stolen at this point
1) he recommended I lock the front hubs and just drive around in 4wd to build some heat in the gears as I brake in the rear, go ahead and change the fluid after following procedures for 500 miles and that should suffice and also strongly recommend I roll around hubs locked for at least 100 miles once a month thereafter to avoid seals drying out and causing a leak. Ive never heard that last part before any input there?
2) he recommended I only run Lucas non synthetic 85w-140 or 75w-140 Amsoil. they build axles for the military and they all run the Lucas. the axles ship dry. any thoughts on initial break in choice and then fill going forward? the jeep will be exposed to super hot deserts and hi altitude super cold. no towing of any significance.
3) just before we got off the phone he offered a solid upgrade to lightweight brakes to help offset some of the monster axle weight, eliminated the mushy pedal one ton brakes typically exhibit and dramatically improve performance so I went ahead and did it.
In my track days upgrading brakes meant a series of stops so I understand the concept but I don't understand if doing so in this application is impacted at all by the fact that I am also braking in gears concurrently.
tossing in a pic because the scale here is almost laughable
Sponsored