Trango
Member
- 735
- 23
- 18
- Location
- Boulder, CO
Title says it all. The 3208T deuce has been fun but I'm looking to build a truck with more power. The hills in Colorado are sizeable enough to make 500-600 ft lbs in this truck seem like a mouse motor. My truck would be a screaming flatland truck but unfortunately I've learned (the hard way) that I need more power and, on the tranny side, more splits.
I'm leaning towards the reputable and somewhat bomb-able Cummins 6CT 8.3 (mechanical). This truck will allow torque numbers into the low 1200's. My 13 speed will accomodate 1400 ft lb input.
I would love to put one of these into a deuce, but I'm concerned about strength of the driveline. Especially at the driveshaft speeds we see when wrapped up to 60MPH (my calculations is about 3200 rpm with 42" rubber), even the larger size (1550) ujoints will be about 400 ft lbs (see graph on page 5 of the below PDF):
http://www.pirate4x4.com/tech/billavista/Driveshafts/Spicer Driveshaft engineering data - IJ900-02[1].pdf
Any thoughts here? Should I sell my deuce and start over with a 5 ton, and single the rear? I think that would be a great way to go.
So many questions....
Best,
Bob
I'm leaning towards the reputable and somewhat bomb-able Cummins 6CT 8.3 (mechanical). This truck will allow torque numbers into the low 1200's. My 13 speed will accomodate 1400 ft lb input.
I would love to put one of these into a deuce, but I'm concerned about strength of the driveline. Especially at the driveshaft speeds we see when wrapped up to 60MPH (my calculations is about 3200 rpm with 42" rubber), even the larger size (1550) ujoints will be about 400 ft lbs (see graph on page 5 of the below PDF):
http://www.pirate4x4.com/tech/billavista/Driveshafts/Spicer Driveshaft engineering data - IJ900-02[1].pdf
Any thoughts here? Should I sell my deuce and start over with a 5 ton, and single the rear? I think that would be a great way to go.
So many questions....
Best,
Bob