Pinion tightening
Moderator: Club Officers
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
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Pinion tightening
So I have a Dana 30 with crush sleeve.. I replaced the pinion bearings and such, and Re-assembled everything. The dealership told me to start tightening it down before the carrier went in, so I did that to about 50 foot pounds. Now the shafts are in and tires are on, and it's on the ground and I want to finish tightening it down, however it won't budge or get any tighter and the pinion is still there wiggling around. Anyone know a good way to get it tightened down???
Thanks,
Bryan
Thanks,
Bryan
98 ZJ
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
- BadAssEddie
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- Location: The Woods
- shmoken875
- Posts: 1642
- Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 9:16 pm
- Location: Columbia, MD
- willhf1011
- Posts: 1626
- Joined: Sun Jul 05, 2009 12:14 pm
- Location: Baltimore, MD/Blacksburg
You dont need to use anything precise to start the crush sleeve. an impact or monster bar works fine. however, once it is started its very easy to overdo it. I use an impact on them and once you see theyve started either turn the gun down or resort to a shorter breaker bar and go in small increments, checking the bearing preload each time. also, you cant really check bearing preload with the ring gear in.
Last edited by willhf1011 on Sat Oct 09, 2010 3:01 am, edited 1 time in total.
93 YJ Under Construction
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
- Contact:
The newer TJ's and ZJ's have the crush sleeve, the XJ's haven't ever used them for some reason.
Ok, looks like i'll be pulling everything apart again this weekend and hope it will tighten correctly.. Would it be possible for me to drive the jeep a quarter mile to a shop and have them do it? It's pretty difficult to get enough room to tighten the pinion nut down that much.
I do have a cordless impact that says it goes to 200 foot pounds, however it didn't even seem to make a difference. I'm definitely stumped on this whole thing.
Bryan
Ok, looks like i'll be pulling everything apart again this weekend and hope it will tighten correctly.. Would it be possible for me to drive the jeep a quarter mile to a shop and have them do it? It's pretty difficult to get enough room to tighten the pinion nut down that much.
I do have a cordless impact that says it goes to 200 foot pounds, however it didn't even seem to make a difference. I'm definitely stumped on this whole thing.
Bryan
98 ZJ
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
200 ft lbs is not all that much, especially in the realm of air impact wrenchesRiversoflucidity wrote:The newer TJ's and ZJ's have the crush sleeve, the XJ's haven't ever used them for some reason.
Ok, looks like i'll be pulling everything apart again this weekend and hope it will tighten correctly.. Would it be possible for me to drive the jeep a quarter mile to a shop and have them do it? It's pretty difficult to get enough room to tighten the pinion nut down that much.
I do have a cordless impact that says it goes to 200 foot pounds, however it didn't even seem to make a difference. I'm definitely stumped on this whole thing.
Bryan
I second Rants advice, that's how we did the rear in my old CJ.
If you do drive it then pull the shafts out. I wouldn't want to drive very far with a pinion "wiggling around"
Nick
'79 Jeep
'99 F350 tow rig
'13 TDI Wagen DD
'79 Jeep
'99 F350 tow rig
'13 TDI Wagen DD
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
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- BadAssEddie
- Posts: 2635
- Joined: Sun Sep 27, 2009 11:12 pm
- Location: The Woods
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
- Contact:
Put the torque wrench on the pinion nut and turn it and see how much resistance there is. For this you need an inch pound wrench and you can look up the specs for what your preload should be. This is very important because the crush sleeve is what sets the bearing preload.
-Zach
2003 Ford F150 work truck piece of crap- sold
1998 Dodge Ram, 35s, 456s- sold
2000 Powerstroke tow rig on DUBs- once rolled- sold
2004 Dodge Ram Hemi tow rig
1995 YJ on BLOCKS
2003 Ford F150 work truck piece of crap- sold
1998 Dodge Ram, 35s, 456s- sold
2000 Powerstroke tow rig on DUBs- once rolled- sold
2004 Dodge Ram Hemi tow rig
1995 YJ on BLOCKS
- willhf1011
- Posts: 1626
- Joined: Sun Jul 05, 2009 12:14 pm
- Location: Baltimore, MD/Blacksburg
Depending on how far the shop is you might ought pull the pinion instead. If you pull the carrier then your shafts will be resting on the inner seals when you drive and you will probably tear them. If you pull the shafts too you wont have the stub shaft in the unit bearing to hold it together.
A crush sleeve can take a shit ton to start, but a dana 30 shouldn't be too bad. a real 200 ft-lbs would do it I would think but it could take more. Once it starts though, be very slow and careful with it. Use a bar type in-lbs torque wrench (the kind that bend with a needle) to see how much drag the pinion has when you are turning it (with no carrier obviously) You have to turn it smoothly an consistently to get an accurate reading (its not the initial reading to get it started moving, but rather the constant force required to keep turning it) new bearings should generally be set to about 20-30 in-lbs I believe. About half that for used bearings.
A crush sleeve can take a shit ton to start, but a dana 30 shouldn't be too bad. a real 200 ft-lbs would do it I would think but it could take more. Once it starts though, be very slow and careful with it. Use a bar type in-lbs torque wrench (the kind that bend with a needle) to see how much drag the pinion has when you are turning it (with no carrier obviously) You have to turn it smoothly an consistently to get an accurate reading (its not the initial reading to get it started moving, but rather the constant force required to keep turning it) new bearings should generally be set to about 20-30 in-lbs I believe. About half that for used bearings.
93 YJ Under Construction
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
- Contact:
Both the inner and outer pinion bearings are new, as well as the crush sleeve.
I've never done this axle gear bearing thing before, so what your saying is that;
1) pull carrier
2) hold yoke down with monkey wrench
3) tighten the hell out of it to get the sleeve to begin to crush
4) then as it compresses check the bearings be putting the torque wrench on the pinion nut to check?
From what a guy in the Jeep club in Nova told me;
"New bearings should be 12-15inch lbs, Reused bearings 6-9 inch lbs"
5) keep tightening until it no-longer can wiggle back and forth then finish torquing it down?
Sorry for all the questions, I've got it all disassembled in my driveway here in Radford and need it finished as soon as possible so I can go home next weekend for a wedding.
Bryan
I've never done this axle gear bearing thing before, so what your saying is that;
1) pull carrier
2) hold yoke down with monkey wrench
3) tighten the hell out of it to get the sleeve to begin to crush
4) then as it compresses check the bearings be putting the torque wrench on the pinion nut to check?
From what a guy in the Jeep club in Nova told me;
"New bearings should be 12-15inch lbs, Reused bearings 6-9 inch lbs"
5) keep tightening until it no-longer can wiggle back and forth then finish torquing it down?
Sorry for all the questions, I've got it all disassembled in my driveway here in Radford and need it finished as soon as possible so I can go home next weekend for a wedding.
Bryan
98 ZJ
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
- shmoken875
- Posts: 1642
- Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 9:16 pm
- Location: Columbia, MD
http://www.yukongear.com/Downloads/Tech ... ctions.pdfRiversoflucidity wrote:Both the inner and outer pinion bearings are new, as well as the crush sleeve.
I've never done this axle gear bearing thing before, so what your saying is that;
1) pull carrier
2) hold yoke down with monkey wrench
3) tighten the hell out of it to get the sleeve to begin to crush
4) then as it compresses check the bearings be putting the torque wrench on the pinion nut to check?
From what a guy in the Jeep club in Nova told me;
"New bearings should be 12-15inch lbs, Reused bearings 6-9 inch lbs"
5) keep tightening until it no-longer can wiggle back and forth then finish torquing it down?
Sorry for all the questions, I've got it all disassembled in my driveway here in Radford and need it finished as soon as possible so I can go home next weekend for a wedding.
Bryan
you're right on the preload
I think steinberg has a needle style in-lb torque wrench, if you ask nicely and give him a sixer of yuengling he may let you borrow it.
Randy
Tow Piglet/DD: Silverado
Driveway Ornament: Clifford the big red Jeep
Tow Piglet/DD: Silverado
Driveway Ornament: Clifford the big red Jeep
If all else fails you can always call Dr. Terry. He makes house call and does it right! I think he is very busy tho, and it will cost some $$, but well worth spending the money now then making it 50 miles down 81. Cause after replacing the pinion bearings you still need to check the backlash. And if that is out because your pinion depth changed slightly, that too would suck!
- Riversoflucidity
- Posts: 15
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2010 11:35 pm
- Location: Radford, Nova
- Contact:
I am going to get it back up on the jack stands and try getting it tightened a bit, and if not I'll try to contact him. Is he on this forum? And if so can I get a number for him? Thankszip ties wrote:If all else fails you can always call Dr. Terry. He makes house call and does it right! I think he is very busy tho, and it will cost some $$, but well worth spending the money now then making it 50 miles down 81. Cause after replacing the pinion bearings you still need to check the backlash. And if that is out because your pinion depth changed slightly, that too would suck!
Bryan
98 ZJ
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..
4.5" IRO l
33s, 31s for travel
Lot's of lights..