8.8 swap commences
Now it is time for bearings and seals. The pinion seal was really ugly, but when I removed it the bearing looked ok, dry but ok. Since I drive this car so much, I leaned to the side of caution and replaced the outer pinion bearing and seal just to be sure. The outer axle bearings were pulled and replaced with an integral bearing and seal assembly. They are normally used on worn axle shafts because the bearing is designed to ride on the journal surface closer to the end of the axle. Because the bearing is further out, the seal is integrated into one unit. I thought it was a good idea and the unit itself looked well made and functional. When I installed the axles into the tubes, there seemed to be very little contact between the axle seal journal and the lip seal. Having done this in the past with the normally separate seal and bearing I wondered if this was going to be enough. I crossed my fingers and hoped this was the way it should be. The seals didn’t leak when I filled the diff, but leaked immediately on my first test drive. I had to pull the axles, pull these very expensive bearings out (about $29 each), and install the standard separate bearing and seal. Live and learn. I may have damaged them when they were installed, but upon comparing them with a standard seal, there was an obvious difference in diameter. The standard seal fit much tighter to the axle then the fancy one did. Plus, the standard separate bearing and seal set up cost less than half of what the fancy ones did. Attached is a pic of the offending unit
Now it is time for bearings and seals. The pinion seal was really ugly, but when I removed it the bearing looked ok, dry but ok. Since I drive this car so much, I leaned to the side of caution and replaced the outer pinion bearing and seal just to be sure. The outer axle bearings were pulled and replaced with an integral bearing and seal assembly. They are normally used on worn axle shafts because the bearing is designed to ride on the journal surface closer to the end of the axle. Because the bearing is further out, the seal is integrated into one unit. I thought it was a good idea and the unit itself looked well made and functional. When I installed the axles into the tubes, there seemed to be very little contact between the axle seal journal and the lip seal. Having done this in the past with the normally separate seal and bearing I wondered if this was going to be enough. I crossed my fingers and hoped this was the way it should be. The seals didn’t leak when I filled the diff, but leaked immediately on my first test drive. I had to pull the axles, pull these very expensive bearings out (about $29 each), and install the standard separate bearing and seal. Live and learn. I may have damaged them when they were installed, but upon comparing them with a standard seal, there was an obvious difference in diameter. The standard seal fit much tighter to the axle then the fancy one did. Plus, the standard separate bearing and seal set up cost less than half of what the fancy ones did. Attached is a pic of the offending unit
Comment