SkiWill
Well-known member
Honestly you need to quit worrying about spline counts and whether the frame will snap in half or whether the transmission was used in a commuter car or dump truck.I'm still IG curious....cross shopping it with LX600 and GX550, so do get a lot out of some of these discussions (at times). Not trying to be negative but I guess it's just where my mind goes. Over on the IG forum I saw this, very good quote that I think does a good job of summing it up and why the polarization between some people:
"Finally, and importantly, I really like the Grenadier as a new vehicle, but I want to love it like an old one"
The axles are excessively built. It doesn't matter whether they are 28 spline or 35 spline. Move on. Carraro forgets more about axle manufacturing on a coffee break than Internet forums know in their collective wisdom. They're one of the biggest and best axle manufacturers on earth. Worrying over spline count is as useful in this situation as fretting over whether Taylor Swift is going to call you up and ask you out on a date.
The transmission is built by one of the biggest and best transmission manufacturers in the world and this is an issue why? Because it was used in a product you find dinky? They know a hell of a lot more about transmissions and what kills them (heat from slipping clutch packs) than any of us do. The higher torque rated 8 speed transmissions also use computer controls to limit engine output in lower gears in diesel trucks so it is really that much heavier duty? Oh, wait, it has to do not only with torque input, but also gear ratio and another myriad of engineering variables that ZF does a whole lot better than forum members do.
They used a transmission that, with suitable cooling, will work just fine for hundreds of thousands of miles. The transmission in my friend's 1964 Land Rover probably had a torque rating of 170 ft/lbs and it drove from Maine to Alaska to Argentina with no issues in the 1990s because it was behind a motor producing well under that. That, is engineering.
The concerns over whether major systems in 2024 built by some of the best manufacturers in the world are going to be up the task is moot. This thing wasn't cobbled together by some hack in a garage with a pencil, paper, and a complete inability to do math. It was built with hundreds of thousands of engineering hours, advanced computational tools, and hundreds of years of manufacturing experience. But, what do I know, I'm just an engineer.
Do you like the Grenadier enough to pay the price and does it fit your needs? Those are the only relevant questions you can answer.
As a heavy industry engineer in 2024, the thought, "Hmmmm. 33 spline shaft? Hmmmm. Should have been 35. Hard pass." will never be uttered by anyone that actually understands engineering, design, and manufacturing in 2024.