What makes you say 200*?
I'm running Lucas Heavy Duty 85w-140 & a quart of heavy duty oil stabilizer.
Hows the upper part of the chunk lubricated? Does the bull (ring) gear just sling it up there?
Well my logic behind that is that mineral based oils break down rapidly above 285*f and that the extreme pressure and wiping action at the contact point of the gears can easily raise the thin layer of oil separating them another 100*+ causing the oil to fail and galling of the gear teeth.
Yes it's splash lubed, their is no oil pump.
Are the axles your referring to under the Jeep in your avatar?
If I was going to run them at high speed for long periods of time I personally would look at switching to a full synthetic polyester 85-140w climbing gear lube. The bad part about the stuff is it's expensive, hard to find, and as far as i know only one company makes it. The good thing about it is that it will run @ 500*f for hours on end and upwards of 800-900*f for brief periods without failing.
As an alternative the other thing I would look into is trying to find some 85-140w gear oil that meats the old defunct API GL-6 rating because it has a higher content of EP and antiscuffing additives, 10% as opposed to 6.5% in GL-5. Their are still quit a few performance oil companies that sell GL-6 but sometimes they refer to it as gl-5+ or severe duty gear oil.
Either one will lower the operating temp of the gearset.
I'm not sure what catagory the lucas gear oil falls into, all the bottle says is exceeds all API GL specs, I have no idea if that includes the old defunct API GL specs or just the current ones. It's anybodys guess as to the amnount of EP and antiscuff additives in it.