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I told them not to balance mine. He asked why I said it was a low speed shaft and for off road use. Still cost more than I expected, maybe 225, but then I needed both inner yokes and didn't ask my pal Arron.
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The stock (rearward) yoke ears are very close to the t-case (1/8"?). The case is dished out too.I would go withHEAVIER u-joints and shaft, so when things give, the shear pin gives, that shaft is to close to the pan to take a chance on busting a hole, this would be a BAD day
Its spinning pretty good but not like a car driveshaft which may be going 10x faster at 60mph and needs to be safe at 120mph. You can see the pto rotation, fast as it may seem to be, but a car drive shaft is a blur at 20mph.You guys mention that the pto shafts are spinning at a low rpm, but what do you call low?
OK, so here's were I went wrong! I looked at and followed the instructions painted on my floor(not the data plate on the dash). My floor is painted so that I did not see the word IN, with the seat down. In the pic below, the seat is flipped up, revealing the other arrow and word IN. I was seeing OUT and an arrow forward!
Now, back to the first pull with the cable treaded through the trolley and tensioner. We pulled all the cable off the drum to get to the track hoe. Then, when I engaged the lever as the arrow on the floor indicates as in, I was actually rotating the drum the wrong way, but since all the cable was out, it still wound up the cable(wrong direction) and allowed the cable to rub on the back edge of the trolley frame ,causing the cable break and inability for the trolley to change directions.
I should have looked at the data plate to confirm the PTO positions.
I also should have got out after the cable was taught, and looked everything over before pulling hard.
Well, I just found a source for the end that was damaged. I'll call the shop tomorrow and see what they found and ask if they want me to supply them with that end.
As for the wall thickness, I think they implied that they only had one thickness available in that diameter. So a clean cut and measure is needed to identify the stock tube thickness. I just didn't want it to be thinner(assuming thinner is less strong).
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