I was dying at the end there, good time to call it quits!Hell yeah man! We're almost there. It got a little warm, that's for sure. Haha!
Shoot, when you look at it, we were at it for about 4-hours. It'll be done in another 30 mins. So, 4 hrs 30 mins (half of which was spent bs'ing), start to finish. Not bad for a couple of boneheads without the 'proper' tools.I was dying at the end there, good time to call it quits!
I got quoted 4 hours shop time when I checked with a diff shop in WA. That was $450 you just saved me.Shoot, when you look at it, we were at it for about 4-hours. It'll be done in another 30 mins. So, 4 hrs 30 mins (half of which was spent bs'ing), start to finish. Not bad for a couple of boneheads without the 'proper' tools.
I wonder how long it takes the pros start to finish to set up an 8-3/4 diff with all new parts and no baseline on shims. It's gotta be a couple hours, right?
Well shoot, we should open a shop.I got quoted 4 hours shop time when I checked with a diff shop in WA. That was $450 you just saved me.
E and J’s Mopar Mechanics and our slogan can be “We can probably fix your ****!”Well shoot, we should open a shop.
That is a bend over and take it price, local shop here is $100, and he gave me a gallon of gear lube.I got quoted 4 hours shop time when I checked with a diff shop in WA. That was $450 you just saved me.
That’s the west coast for you, everything is expensive. I think the guy just didn’t want to do it.That is a bend over and take it price, local shop here is $100, and he gave me a gallon of gear lube.
I have yet to put the 4.30 gears in my Duster to replace the 3.23.
He also told me the best way to break in gears, is to run it easy down the road for at least 15 minutes to warm the rear end up.
Park it over night repeat 2 more times. Basically heat cycle the gears to set the wear pattern.
I think that price is only marginally higher than I paid to have my 489 case set up with my spool and new gears last summer. This is in the Detroit area.That is a bend over and take it price, local shop here is $100, and he gave me a gallon of gear lube.
I have yet to put the 4.30 gears in my Duster to replace the 3.23.
He also told me the best way to break in gears, is to run it easy down the road for at least 15 minutes to warm the rear end up.
Park it over night repeat 2 more times. Basically heat cycle the gears to set the wear pattern.
yeah i mostly ran the gears in on my anglia gasser driving on 2 wheels, lol.I think that price is only marginally higher than I paid to have my 489 case set up with my spool and new gears last summer. This is in the Detroit area.
And then there's that break-in thing. I wasn't putting the street tires and mufflers on the car and driving it on the streets at that time. So the break-in was a warmup down the return road prior to the track going live, then a burnout, then an 11-sec something pass!!
Heck yeah man. That damn thing fought us at the end, but we taught it a lesson.This job is officially in the bucket, huge shout out to @mopowers (pic of his orange Dart)for showing me how to do this, can’t wait to burn some rubber with em.
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Thank you Sir!Well Happy Birthday to you then!!
Trying to keep up with you! Thanks man!Happy Birthday! Love the updates, moving forward!!
Thank you! I went for the 3” studs to match the look of the NASCAR style wheels, I have some Moroso studs for the front I’ll press in next.Happy Birthday, why did you order it with long wheel studs?
Thanks man! I’ve got the gauge cluster that needs to be finished, epoxy, paint and it’s done. I want to start on the metal work soon, but it’s so damn hot. Then it’s wiring, motor assembly, 4 speed/clutch assembly, and the final mechanical piece will be a driveshaft. Seems like a lot but I’m just plugging along.Happy Bday Jared! Looks like a good productive day before it warmed up. What's up next once the rearend's in place?