Pinion angle help.

Trans 1 degree down, pinion 3 1/2 down sounds pretty close to what it needs to be. When you accelerate the pinion should come up about 3 degrees putting the pinion at 1/2 down but you really need 1 degree up during acceleration. Left to right centering (from what I have read) shouldn't make any difference. Does everyone else agree???????

If there is no vibration under normal operating conditions then the angles are correct.
If there is vibration under acceleration, you need to add more downward pinion angle preload. If the opposite occurs, the vibrations tends to decrease or disappear under acceleration, you need to reduce the downward angle preload.

If the vibration steadily increases with driveshaft speed (either accelerating or decelerating) the symptom is primarily the result of a driveshaft imbalance or yoke runout. Sometimes this yoke runout problem can be improved by rotating the U-joint 180-degrees in the rear end differential yoke.

Driveshaft-related vibrations usually occur at roughly engine speed in high gear. Wheel/axle vibrations usually occur at 1/3 rd engine speed or driveshaft speed because of the differential gearing. To determining whether it is the output of the transmission or the pinion in the differential, change gears when the noise occurs and maintain speed. If the vibration/noise changes in frequency, the source is in the transmission or engine. If the frequency remains the same it is a driveline problem.

treblig
Yes...final angle under power..if the trans is 1° down(this doesn't change) the pinion should be 1° up under power.. to acheive this set the pinion down 2° if you figure it will climb 3° under power. As far as side to side our engines/drivelines are off-center, but the rear chunk makes up for that difference as the driveline doesn't hit the exact center of the rear allowing the axles to be the same length on both sides (treblig that's a good way to isolate a drivetrain vibration too!)