- Banned
- #181
Yeah I think I'll just hold off. I do not wanna void my warranty. Mostly because my wife will void my life.I’d just love to pick your brain and learn how to do gears. It will void the warranty for the gears. I had Jeep agree to warranty my locker sensor even though I had regeared. I didn’t take them up on it though as they were going to have it too long and I fixed it myself.
Setting up gears requires some specific tooling and ability to measure in the thousandths. Micrometers, dial indicators, various torque wrenches, maybe a cutoff wheel, and most importantly...a bearing press. This is not stuff you can do with a hammer and crescent wrench in the driveway. It also takes a lot of care and patience. It takes a lot of measuring and mocking up before final assembly. And final assembly requires extreme attention to detail. With experience it becomes pretty easy even though the job itself is large. Reading the contact patterns and what to do with that info is crucial.
Although I'm not any kind of brand loyalist...I will say the Ford 9-inch is probably the best for quick and easy setups. They use minimal shims yet the same rules apply. I used to keep about eight 9-inch pumpkins with various gear ratios in constant rotation for a clients SCCA circle track car. The track length and straightaways would dictate which gear set he used. And with drag racing you'd basically math it out so your engine is running out of RPMs in final drive as you go through the lights. Too much gear will have you bouncing off the rev limiter. Too little and you're leaving power on the table. It was a dance between tire size at speed and final drive ratio. Tires grow a lot at 150-200 mph. Anyway, with the ford 9 inch you just plop the whole pumpkin on a bench and off you go. You could service it pretty easily even in the pits, compared to a GM or Dana model where you gotta be underneath the vehicle pretty much the whole time. That sucks. Honestly I'd rather just swap in an entire different rear end on those models.
So if you wanna learn and practice, I'd suggest finding an 8 or 9 inch ford pumpkin...maybe from a junkyard or something...and just rip it apart and rebuild it correctly and incorrectly so you can see how it affects the gear contact pattern.
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