tango0508
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Good point. I PM George and hope to hear back from him about what he has.
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Before you walk I would take a jack to one rear axle and raise it off of the ground and verify they welded the diffs.
Think about the work someone would have to go through to weld both diffs. I would not trust the word of the seller.
There's nothing inherently wrong with welded differentials. All you're doing is turning an open differential into a spool. Not good or bad, more a matter of application. I'm probably going to weld-up one of my rear axles and then install locking hubs, and those of you who are familiar with my work know that I don't half-ass anything.Ditto to Derrick's comment.
Plan on replacing both of the rear pumpkins (chunks, 3rd member, etc) with used take outs.
Also, the kind of people who do that kind of thing are also the kind of people who do other things that might be considered "bad".
I saw plenty of musclecars with homemade spools (welded spider gears) and that was never the only poor choice associated with the vehicle.
A field expedient locker! Clever. I believe an issue is how well the spiders are welded. I understand that sometimes the weld can fail. Perhaps that only happens with slim shady weld jobs.There's nothing inherently wrong with welded differentials. All you're doing is turning an open differential into a spool. Not good or bad, more a matter of application. I'm probably going to weld-up one of my rear axles and then install locking hubs, and those of you who are familiar with my work know that I don't half-ass anything.
Try to avoid speaking in absolute terms, because there are always exceptions. For instance, would prefer a spool to a detroit-type locker (rear) in a short-wheelbase vehicles. Like my old CJ7. Chirped the tires a bit, but was much more predictable than a detroit. Lifted, flexy, lightweight, short-wheelbase vehicles that get driven on-road (especially in snow and on ice) can be a real handful.In my opinion, if you've got welded spider gears (in any truck driven daily) avoid it! Period!!!
Maybe I should explain. Jack up one rear axle, the whole axle with the jack placed under the pumpkin with both tires off the ground. With that axle off the ground on a stock deuce you can turn the tires. They will turn in opposite directions. If the diff is welded nothing will turn.Jacking up one axle won't help, the other axle on the ground is connected by driveshaft and won't allow it to spin. Have to jack both rear's up on one side.
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