Kpack
Adventurer
Project: Driveshaft balance
Purpose: I had my driveshaft balanced a month ago and though everything felt great early on, it started to shake worse than before later. i noticed that the two halves of the shaft were out of phase with each other and wanted to get it right so I didn't have to worry about it.
Materials
-appropriately sized box-end wrenches
-sockets (14mm)
-impact gun (with extension and u-joints for flexibility)
Procedure:
-Block front tires
-Put truck in neutral
-Mark shaft at each end to make sure it goes back on correctly (factory service manual shows how to do this)
-Remove rear of the driveshaft first
-Use box-end wrench on the nut, and the impact gun on the bolt, remove the nuts and leave the bolts in until you are ready to remove
-Once all the nuts are off, use a rubber mallet to tap the rear flange off, and carefully drop the driveshaft to the ground. It's heavy, so be ready.
-Move to the front and do the same thing. The truck must be in neutral for the front because you will need to spin the driveshaft by hand to get to all the bolts.
-Leave front flange on the bolts for now, then use 14mm to remove the two carrier bearing bolts. The whole driveshaft will come down now, so be ready.
-Gently slide the front flange off and remove the driveshaft from the truck.
After balancing just do everything in reverse order.
-Front flange yoke: 65 ft/lbs (it helps to put the truck into park for this part)
-Rear flange yoke: 65 ft/lbs
-Carrier bearing bolts: 30 ft/lbs
-run a string from the bottom of the front flange to the bottom of the rear flange, then line up the carrier bearing bracket so the center of the bearing is on the line. Then torque.
Here's balancing the driveshaft. Pretty cool machine. Everything is free float, with dial indicators at front, middle, and rear.
Rear shaft runout.
Mid-shaft (behind the double-Cardan joint). Lots of shaking here. At the end you can see the front flange runout....nice and tight
Post balancing. It took a few tries to get it right, but look at that difference.
Got it all back on, torqued to spec and marked all the bolts to easily check torque in the future.
Lots of the shakes are gone now. Most everything is pretty smooth. There is still some in the background, but I'm not too worried about it. I do need to pull my front coilovers and have them rebuilt soon though....I can tell they are past due. I'm not sure of the mileage on them but I know it's way over what Icon recommends.
Purpose: I had my driveshaft balanced a month ago and though everything felt great early on, it started to shake worse than before later. i noticed that the two halves of the shaft were out of phase with each other and wanted to get it right so I didn't have to worry about it.
Materials
-appropriately sized box-end wrenches
-sockets (14mm)
-impact gun (with extension and u-joints for flexibility)
Procedure:
-Block front tires
-Put truck in neutral
-Mark shaft at each end to make sure it goes back on correctly (factory service manual shows how to do this)
-Remove rear of the driveshaft first
-Use box-end wrench on the nut, and the impact gun on the bolt, remove the nuts and leave the bolts in until you are ready to remove
-Once all the nuts are off, use a rubber mallet to tap the rear flange off, and carefully drop the driveshaft to the ground. It's heavy, so be ready.
-Move to the front and do the same thing. The truck must be in neutral for the front because you will need to spin the driveshaft by hand to get to all the bolts.
-Leave front flange on the bolts for now, then use 14mm to remove the two carrier bearing bolts. The whole driveshaft will come down now, so be ready.
-Gently slide the front flange off and remove the driveshaft from the truck.
After balancing just do everything in reverse order.
-Front flange yoke: 65 ft/lbs (it helps to put the truck into park for this part)
-Rear flange yoke: 65 ft/lbs
-Carrier bearing bolts: 30 ft/lbs
-run a string from the bottom of the front flange to the bottom of the rear flange, then line up the carrier bearing bracket so the center of the bearing is on the line. Then torque.
Here's balancing the driveshaft. Pretty cool machine. Everything is free float, with dial indicators at front, middle, and rear.
Rear shaft runout.
Mid-shaft (behind the double-Cardan joint). Lots of shaking here. At the end you can see the front flange runout....nice and tight
Post balancing. It took a few tries to get it right, but look at that difference.
Got it all back on, torqued to spec and marked all the bolts to easily check torque in the future.
Lots of the shakes are gone now. Most everything is pretty smooth. There is still some in the background, but I'm not too worried about it. I do need to pull my front coilovers and have them rebuilt soon though....I can tell they are past due. I'm not sure of the mileage on them but I know it's way over what Icon recommends.
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