Quote:
Originally Posted by THEFERMANATOR
Axle seal is on the axle shafts inside the tubes. The one your talking about is a pinion seal. An axle seal would fail inspection because it leaks differential fluid directly onto the rear brakes whereas a pinion seal just sprays underneath. And for setting the pinion torque it isn't ANYWHERE near as simple as just torquing it on most car diffs.
The pinion nut is a one time use lock-nut that holds the pinion support/yoke on. It's torque in most modern axles determines pinion rotational torque. There is a crush sleeve inside the fiff in between the 2 pinion bearings and by tightening the pinion nut it crush's the sleeve until the desired rotational torque is achieved to turn the pinion. This way the pinion is held steady under all loads. Too loose and the pinion walks up and down and wipes out the gears, too tight and the bearings will be crushed. Some diffs use a shim arrangement and all you have to do is install a new nut and torque it down. If you have a crush sleeve you have to torque it till the rotational torque is reached. If you overtighten it you MUST install a new crush sleeve and start over with the torquing.
If you replace a pinion seal you replace the pinion nut and torque it to roughly 180-225 foot pounds(depending upon differential) as most crush sleeves require roughly 200-240 foot pounds of torque with a new pinion locking nut to compress.
And yes it is FERM(actual name is FERMAN), but I let the eye getaway with THERM since this is his place and all  .
|
Yes it is the axle seal (her car did fail inspection) and I'm getting ready to start the job. I'm not sure if this has been any help or made me more confused. I guess I'l get started and find out what I have and maybe come back and ask for some more help. I have a manual so that should help but I could not find any info about that nut which seems to be very important to have the proper torque. Thanks for the info and I might I'll probably be back looking for some more help.
Hey if any of you have those clear plastic lense covers for your headlights if they get foggy 3M makes a great kit for repairing them. I did those last night and they look like new and the kit is only $19 from auto zone. You onloy need a drill and some tape and it takes about 30 minutes to sand them down and buff them out.