cumminscruiser
Adventurer
SOR has FF axles for 4 bills, not so bad 2 bills would be better.
Well, stupid driving techniques and broken welds at the spring perches lead to a snapped pinion gear in the rear axle. Then the drive line fell out. The bad part was not being able to go forward. One inch in the forward direction and the rear end locks up so that meant 2 1/2 miles in reverse down a tough 4WD trail.
Enough of the expanation, Since I will be replacing the ring and pinion, is the stock Toyota ring and pinion the strongest way? or is there a better aftermarket set-up out there. The vehicle is a '85 FJ60 with stock running gear. My ratio is 3.90:1.
J...IIRC, the shaft on a semi-floating LC axle is actually larger in diameter than its FF counterpart...
...I will say this: In my experience, and those of many acquaintances, the strength of a stock Land Cruiser semi-floating rear axle is more than sufficient for the vast majority of use.
I'm running a set of Longfield chromoly drive flanges with a set of custom 4340 Superior axleshafts in my custom Diamond Axles Tacoma/T100/Tundra rear axle with a FROR full-floater conversion kit. It's about as burly as we could build a Toyota-based rear axle.Having seen the results of a rear (Warn) locking hub failure on MISF's Warn FF converted Scout II I would not want locking hubs on the rear. Even if they were Aisin's.
I'm running a set of Longfield chromoly drive flanges with a set of custom 4340 Superior axleshafts in my custom Diamond Axles Tacoma/T100/Tundra rear axle with a FROR full-floater conversion kit. It's about as burly as we could build a Toyota-based rear axle.