welded diff
#12
Originally Posted by 1988RedT2' post='895733' date='Mar 3 2008, 07:23 AM
My question would be, is this car going to spend all it's time on the dragstrip or will it be street driven?
Meh. Never mind. Apparently kids the world over are welding their diffs to "look cool". Seems to be a very common practice in the "drifting community." Still, it strikes me as a cheap alternative to doing it right, unless this is exclusively a track car.
#14
The answer your not wanting to hear is they are dangerous. Only use for them is in a demolition derby! This is heat treated metal and welding does nothing but weaken the parts. Do it right and find another rear or rebuild the one you have.
#15
its not that i dont want to hear its dangerous, i'm aware of metal and heat...... i still think its a matter of opinion....
Originally Posted by Fastenough' post='895813' date='Mar 3 2008, 06:22 PM
The answer your not wanting to hear is they are dangerous. Only use for them is in a demolition derby! This is heat treated metal and welding does nothing but weaken the parts. Do it right and find another rear or rebuild the one you have.
#16
Ita amazing how many armchair experts come out on topics they have no clue about. My daily driven pickup has welded spiders, 30,000+ miles on it, my cousins ae86 has had the same for 5+ years and my turbo II will soon have it as well. It chirps around corners and is shimmy at times but if you can drive right it will put down the power. Forums should answer questions with experiance rather than stories.
Most fab/hot rod shops will do this for you.
Most fab/hot rod shops will do this for you.
#17
Look Iam not going to get into a pissing match with ya,
With modern tires and concrete roads, a great deal of force is required to make a tire slip. This can not happen welded! Your Quote(It chirps around corners and is shimmy at times) Hello!!
That force is transmitted through the axle from one wheel to another, putting a heavy strain on the axle components. The tires today are not old bias ply or belted of the past! Look at the bite a drag radial can put to the track. Guy's are going 7's with street tires, and you can bet there are no welded gears in those cars.
30,000 miles with an empty pickup as a load does not constitute durability or saftey. Load 1000 lbs in the back of that truck and drive it though the city for a day.
Again this is usually done on dirt where putting a heavy strain on the axle components is not the case. Todays fuel injected turbo V-6 is making more HP at the crank than most V-8's 25 years ago and yes some of you guys can put out some very good numbers with the Rotary.
Yeah it's an old trick, there are a few of you that think it's great! well my friend, I do hope I am nowhere near you when your vehicle decides to make an abrupt turn due to breakage on the street.
By the way I'll race my armchair against any of yours at a track!
With modern tires and concrete roads, a great deal of force is required to make a tire slip. This can not happen welded! Your Quote(It chirps around corners and is shimmy at times) Hello!!
That force is transmitted through the axle from one wheel to another, putting a heavy strain on the axle components. The tires today are not old bias ply or belted of the past! Look at the bite a drag radial can put to the track. Guy's are going 7's with street tires, and you can bet there are no welded gears in those cars.
30,000 miles with an empty pickup as a load does not constitute durability or saftey. Load 1000 lbs in the back of that truck and drive it though the city for a day.
Again this is usually done on dirt where putting a heavy strain on the axle components is not the case. Todays fuel injected turbo V-6 is making more HP at the crank than most V-8's 25 years ago and yes some of you guys can put out some very good numbers with the Rotary.
Yeah it's an old trick, there are a few of you that think it's great! well my friend, I do hope I am nowhere near you when your vehicle decides to make an abrupt turn due to breakage on the street.
By the way I'll race my armchair against any of yours at a track!
#19
Welding the differential is fine. Sorry but have any of you that are talking about it being unsafe done it? Drove one? Seen one that broke and figures out why the thing broke? I have. I have had several one was a ford 7.5 in a ford ranger pushing 306 to the rear wheels with a 100 shot on top of that(was told I should have snapped eveything in the rear) you know what? Never had a lick of trouble out of it what so ever. The biggest reasoning behind welding being bad is that you have to know how to weld it and if it is a cast carrier you have to make sure it is heat cycles properly.
#20
i just got my diff welded on my 87 . **** works pretty nice and still has most of the fc's great handling. just make sure you get someone to spider weld it after cleaning the **** out of it with brake cleaner!