corelokt
Member
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- 16
- Location
- Duffield, VA. (East of nowhere).
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Your correct about properly adjusting the backlash on the PTO gears. They should be around 0.006" to 0.012" clearance. Any more and you will get what I call "gear flop" . That is when the gears have to much lash and they flop back and forth between the gears. This can lead to teeth breaking on the gears since your slamming back and forth. If the setting is too tight it can cause "binding" as the gears heat up during use. That can cause bearing failure and shafts breaking as your actually forcing them out of alignment. I've seen countershafts broken by improperly shimming the PTO unit.That is a PTO in the first picture. Hard to tell what it will fit from the picture. I used to install them on all types of vehicles. We do not make dump trucks anymore because of the liability. That liability thing is sure killing a lot of business. That PTO needs precise installation and adjustments when properly installed. Any hydraulic pumps we install now are electric. 99% of the vehicles we build are NON CDL trucks. Good Luck on your install. Make sure it is shimmed properly.
That is a question that I can only interpret as, "is this an np205 transfercase".Is this a np205 t case?
This I would interpret as you have a question about an np205 power take off.Np205 pto?
And in-fact, the correct PTO will have 6 bolts. So I have no clue what you are implying there.Thank you. 6 bolts, not right then.
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