Good video, I like how you put it together with limited tools, I have limited tools, I bought a small toaster oven for 20 bucks to heat my ring gear and bearings.
Only thing that can improve this video is a Jersey girl in the background yelling "WTF did I tell you about fixing your car in the kitchen"! Good vid, thanks!
thanks for the video, i had heard people use the old shim as a baseline and they sand down the i.d of old bearing slightly for removal for setup. that sucks after all the work you put in it was the wrong carrier.
Sand the protective coating off where the pinion bearings go. That way that pinion bearing can be taped off to change the shims easily. Also sand the surface on the ring gear to have a more flatter surface. Yes locktight on the pinion nut and ring gear bolts.
I watched another video where the guy sanded the inside of the old bearing to use as testers bearings while figuring out the correct shim set up. I'm trying that method now but looking for the tolerance on the carrier itself, i have roughly a 1/16 of play side to side which affects the backlash.
Ok this all well and good how do you know what number to go to? I get how everything is happening but how do you know what the depth is supposed to be?
Yukon says to install without the crush sleeve at first while getting the shims dialed in but you reused the sleeve. Logically it makes sense that you can reuse the crush sleeve as long as you did not over tighten it. Is this what your experience has been?
You can do it that way but I've done it enough to have a pretty good "feel" for it. If it's your first time then yes install without it to get the shims close.
Thanks man rebuilding soon learning a lot
Good video, I like how you put it together with limited tools, I have limited tools, I bought a small toaster oven for 20 bucks to heat my ring gear and bearings.
work with what you got!!
Only thing that can improve this video is a Jersey girl in the background yelling "WTF did I tell you about fixing your car in the kitchen"! Good vid, thanks!
Lmao!!
make sure your seal is not the truck seal which most kits include.its longer than the car seal which had a short depth.
thanks for the video, i had heard people use the old shim as a baseline and they sand down the i.d of old bearing slightly for removal for setup. that sucks after all the work you put in it was the wrong carrier.
It happens unfortunately. Sometimes the parts stores aren't perfect but nobody is.
Hi, would you mind telling me how hot you got your oven and how long you left the ring in? Thanks!
Sand the protective coating off where the pinion bearings go. That way that pinion bearing can be taped off to change the shims easily. Also sand the surface on the ring gear to have a more flatter surface. Yes locktight on the pinion nut and ring gear bolts.
I watched another video where the guy sanded the inside of the old bearing to use as testers bearings while figuring out the correct shim set up. I'm trying that method now but looking for the tolerance on the carrier itself, i have roughly a 1/16 of play side to side which affects the backlash.
Ok this all well and good how do you know what number to go to? I get how everything is happening but how do you know what the depth is supposed to be?
it will be marked on the pinion gear
Yukon says to install without the crush sleeve at first while getting the shims dialed in but you reused the sleeve. Logically it makes sense that you can reuse the crush sleeve as long as you did not over tighten it. Is this what your experience has been?
You can do it that way but I've done it enough to have a pretty good "feel" for it. If it's your first time then yes install without it to get the shims close.