The last round of parts turned out very nice Mike!
Going with Woods for drive shafts or someone else you know of?







Mike thats going to a very capable rig when done!
Is there a Jeep site this build is on?

You know, the guys that think they are the only real Jeepers because they buy their parts out of the junkyard and then half-*** their **** together and break down on the trail for bragging rights.![]()
am i the only one surprised that the cases were NOT gold leafed, painted or PC'd prior to reassembly.
God, I hate that crowed. I have a buddy like that who always wants me to go wheeling with him. I refuse. If your wheeler doesn't run well enough that you can't make to the trail without a trailer, I don't want to hear about how my paint looks too nice or I should wheel my **** harder. I have no interest in hanging out in the desert with you overnight because you half *** everything, maintain nothing, and abuse everything. And no, you can't borrow my tools or spare parts. I'll help anyone that made an effort to be prepared. I'm not helping Joe Blow Dipshit.
As a racer, I won't climb into an offroad vehicle that is cobbled together; it's either 100% prepped or I'm not your guy......and yes, I will make the changes I feel necessary if you want me to get in.
Like they say, some have more money then they do sense.
A true accomplishment is building a rig that doesn’t break and driving smart so nothing is damaged. Just goes to show where society has progressed to, doing it wrong is right or the norm.
Sent from my iPhone using The Garage Journal mobile app
As always everything is turning out top drawer.
I'm with you and BG, I stopped doing certain activities just because it became expected I'd fix someone's **** that wasn't running. It got to the point with boating an inlaw would bring their not running ski and expect me to get it running while I'm on vacation. I can't tell you how many times someone's pos stayed on the trailer or the beach for the entire time before they learned. And back when I tracked my street car, there were guys I would not run with period! It never failed they'd always end up in the gravel and I was not going to be next to them when they got in over their heads.






















Made a lot of progress on my son’s WJ today. It was awesome to be able to spend the entire day wrenching in the shop with him before he left to go be with his girlfriend. We had some great conversation and it was just an overall fantastic day.
I picked up the last two seals yesterday that we needed to finish the TC assembly. Input seal installed in the front housing and housing installed.
Transfer case completed and ready to install in the Jeep.
After we bolted the transfer case in we started on the rear axle by getting all of the parts set out, cleaned, inspected and ready for installation. He is installing 4.56:1 gears and I wanted my son to build the axles so I supervised and assisted when needed.
Removed the pinion bearing to see what the factory shim thickness was. After measuring the .050” shim we set it aside for using on the initial setup. At .050” this was the thickest of the past half dozen or so Dana 44’s that I’ve done.
Time to get out the set-up bearings.
We pressed the ring gear onto the Eaton TrueTrac carrier at commenced to torque the ring gear bolts after applying red Loctite.
After the ring gear was installed we heated the carrier bearings and installed them so they could cool before needing to handle the carrier. One of the things I was trying to reiterate to my son is thinking through the process to alleviate waiting time and to keep the work flowing. By getting the carrier ready and it cooling we could focus on the pinion.
Case spreader installed, housing cleaned and pinion races removed.
Time to get the assortment of shims standing by.
Ring gear painted with marking compound and ready for initial test.
Pinion way too deep with the pattern too close to the flank. Backlash was also a bit tight at .003”.
He took it all back apart and installed a .041” pinion shim that I had in my assortment.
That turned out to be the ticket. A slight alteration to the carrier side shim packs and it netted us exactly what we were after. Beautiful water pattern on both drive and coast sides with a backlash of .008”.
Engraved all of the specs on the ring gear. Ended up at 22 in/lbs of pinion bearing preload with an addition 8 in/lbs of carrier bearing preload after releasing the case spreader.
Buttoned everything up and installed the diff cover.
Lastly before closing up the shop for the afternoon we set the brake backing plates in place awaiting the axle shafts.
As soon as he gets the front axle housing painted with POR15 we can assemble it.
Thanks for looking.
Nice work Mike...I mean supervision!!! LOL...
Love how you run m ore than one pattern on the Gears.
First person I've ever seen put a Jeep axle together with the actual correct bearing tooling and housing spreader. Haha! ( Maybe myself included )
Looking great.
Man, you are well equipped! The bearing warmer is cool, I've never seen one of those before. Setting up gears is right up your alley; the detail in your work really shows. I like how you took the time to engrave all your spec's.
That's it Mike. The next time I gotta do gears I'm coming up.![]()
Nicely done Mike as usual.
Really enjoy seeing the father/son project come together. As for your specialty tools, well they not only save you big money but ensures the job is done correctly.
Nice job my friend.

Lots of good progress on the Jeep I see. Question, how does one know the correct amount of tension to put on using the case spreader? I see most guys are adding .003 per side for bearing preload, and encouraging it in place with a rubber mallet- obviously not the proper procedure. Are you some how able to measure roughly .006 spread?


could open your own shop....er, nevermind.
Great work as always mike. Attention to detail is amazing.
Bryan, proper carrier pre-load is hard or next to impossible to achieve by merely pounding in shims on the sides of the carrier bearings. I generally shoot for 7-10 in/lb increase from what the pinion bearing preload is. For example, on this one the PPL (pinion pre-load) was 22 in/lbs because of new bearings, used bearings will be slightly less, when we spread the case and installed the shims, we knew we had the proper amount when we released the case spreader pressure and we then had 30 in/lbs of preload on at the pinion. That was an increase of 8 in/lbs with the carrier installed and case relaxed.
Spreading the case is usually done more by feel than actually measuring anything. The measuring is done when with rotating torque after the tension from the case spreader is removed. On this one I must admit, the case spreader took much more force than normal due to the truss that was welded on the top.
I hope that answers your question and thank you for following along Bryan.
That's it Mike. The next time I gotta do gears I'm coming up.![]()
My thoughts exactly. I was going to say my Ford 8.8 was on its way to Utah, for Mike to rebuild. Love your excellent photos and explanation of the processes too. Thanks Mike, keep em coming.
Mike
You have no idea how much I have learned about differentials in this post.
Thanks Mike!
![]()
You never see them once they are installed and the only time people think about them is when something goes to **** with them. Even back in high school I started setting up gears for buddies and really began to enjoy working with them and netting the rewards after the proper gear selection and installation, most were never interested in them but bolt on a new set of lights or big tires and they were drooling all over them.
Thanks for the explanation Mike. I was wondering if it was more of a feel thing, guided by past experience. Your spreader tool probably took one look at the truss and said "put me back in the tool box!"
...........Gearing seems to be the last thing people think about. I then get comments like "how much would you charge me to do gears? It has to be cheap because I already spent all of my money on the tires, wheels, lift kit and OH yeah, lights." That is when IF they decided to do gears, they take it to the absolute cheapest shop they can rather than the best.
Sorry for rant, just one of my pet peeves.


You have no idea how much I have learned about differentials in this post.
Thanks Mike!
![]()
Going to second that comment.... I will probably never work on a rear end (except the one attached to my hips.... no comments on that one Cam!) but I love seeing the process especially when executed and described as well as this....
Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk Pro