PugetDude
ALLIANCE MEMBER
Well ya Cam, what can I say? I'm as normal as you are bud!
Justin you really need to set the bar a bit higher.
Well ya Cam, what can I say? I'm as normal as you are bud!
Ya, well we're starting at the bottom hereJustin you really need to set the bar a bit higher.
On the way just not sure which direction....All in time!


The circles in the middle of each foot pedal look like the Audi emblem.
Around these parts that driver description better fits the BMW stereotype than Audi stereotype, although the Audi stereotype is one of frustrated wannaB BMW owners in training.


Thanks guys, #2 was my thought as well. The hydraulics are not that strong on this machine. It can be easily shimmed for more pressure, but is well matched to bucket capacity now. I assume the bucket got dropped full on top of some object. The FEL is touchy lowering heavy loads.
I commented to my wife that I had some 'tractor therapy' doing the dirt work after a long day in the office.
She replied 'a therapy tractor? You need a therapy tractor?
I just said 'yes'.
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Marc, if you combine tractor therapy with military therapy, it lasts a lot longer. This was me, the tank commander, shortly after the end of the Korean War.Tractor therapy is real...and no one will change my mind otherwise! There is just something about running equipment and forgetting about the rest of the world.

Any ideas in how to bend the bucket lip back flat? I didn't damage, but would like to fix.




Good damn luck getting that on an airplane with yaShe replied 'a therapy tractor? You need a therapy tractor?
I just said 'yes'.
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I did the front Dana 44 in my Bronco a couple years ago. I bought a case spreader online and it was plenty stout.
That's what I bought. Stupid heavy though so I built a plywood box just big enough to hold it all together, screwed the lid on and fastened a strap handle for storage. I was concerned I would need some Mike adapters but it fit the D44 perfectly.Agreed. There are several available online nowadays and no reason not to have one if you plan on doing more than even one setup. A friend of mine bought one by Vevor a couple of years ago and if memory serves it was under $100.
Well that gearset is done. Must be a hell of a loading to pop those teeth off.Back on cobra diff project. Cleaned the incredibly stinky black goo off of everything and put new carbon fiber clutches in carrier.
Popped carrier in and re-checked backlash, same as before. The one thing I didn't do before disassembly was try to replicate noise on the bench. I popped cover off and did visual instead.
So next step was to spin assembly carefully, pre-loaded to see if I could find the 'spot' before doing pattern check. Well I found it. I could feel that 3 teeth that made contact differently. Popped carrier back out and found cracks at the root of many teeth
Given the damage I can't imagine the one last drive had too much to do with it.
Going through my options to fix. I think it is time I learn and equip myself with the rest of the tooling needed to do gear setup. Any tool purchase opportunity is a positive outcome. Probably fab a case spreader. I've done 9" gears but iterative stack-up shimming is another beast. I could change ratio but 3.55 gears are already a good match to power and use.
Life has a way of doing that, plenty to do and more coming at me. One home AC/heatpump in down. CEL on daughters car.Good catch on the gear cracks Justin. I had a similar situation with a pinion a couple years ago but it actually failed on me during operation. That wouldn't have lasted much longer then you'd be back in there doing it again.
I am impressed with the wide range of projects you are tackling in a relatively short time...... and I thought I shifted gears between projects quickly (pun intended).![]()
Yes it's time has passed. cracks go all the way in. Not far from coming apart.Well that gearset is done. Must be a hell of a loading to pop those teeth off.

Perhaps. Not sure, assume that is higher strength material? I am surprised the pinion broke and not a half shaft or damage the carrier. Shock loads from wheel hop are death to half shafts. I run 14-16 psi in the drag radials to mitigate, and if it hops I lift.Or incredibly bad luck to repeatably launch on those particular teeth.
They make 9310 gearsets for that diff?
That is one way to put an axle in neutral.I had wheel hop one time on my 9" in the Fairlane. I broke the pinion shaft in half. That was not a good time.
Yes Big Brother is watching. Someone got paid to send you that. Time for tin foil hats.9310 is the choice for drag race (& I understand some Trophy Trucks) ring & pinions for it's superior shock loading performance. Comes at a cost, life-span is shorter to considerably shorter.
The algorithm works, these turned up in my email this afternoon: https://www.markwilliams.com/mw-12-modular-rears.html First ad that I can recall getting from MW....

