- 285
- 588
- 93
- Location
- Portland, OR
Appreciate all the advise guys, you make pretty good points. What do they say, “an ounce of prevention is better than a pound of cure”?
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
No affiliation:Who did you use for the rebuild?
Is there a way to test/feel/ monkey diagnose a vibration or shaft that may be out of balance without pulling it out?I recommend getting the driveshafts balanced. Yes, it's going to cost at least a few hundred dollars if they find nothing, and almost everyone reports that they do find issues and the total bill is like $750-1000. The gamble is that while it seems like most driveshafts need significant repairs, only maybe 5% of people have issues... however, the "issues" they have (including myself) are extreme: broken alternators, broken starters, cracked water pumps, and finally broken engine blocks and transmissions. That stuff is expensive to fix, can be difficult to get parts for, and is very time consuming to repair. So if you don't get them balanced, like me, you may end up spending $10,000 and a month's worth of nights and weekends to replace a whole engine, also like me.
Don't take the shortcut. Get them balanced.
Yes, you can grab / push / pull, but this is of limited value. Don't gamble, git'r done.Is there a way to test/feel/ monkey diagnose a vibration or shaft that may be out of balance without pulling it out?
I feel your pain!Have a 2003 M1078A1 with ~9,500 miles. Pulled both my drivelines to get balanced. Both splined drives had so much play that they couldn't balance them and had to replace both splined drives. Also two of the four u-joints were shot as well.
Work done was:
- Two new splined drives
- Both shafts balanced
- Four new u-joints
Out the door for ~$1,600 - work was done in Reno, NV.