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Ford Explorer Maintenance - Modifications - Performance Upgrades - Problem Solving - Off-Road - Street
Explorer Forum Covers the Explorer ST, Explorer Sport, Explorer Sport Trac, Lincoln Aviator, Mercury Mountaineer, Mazda Navajo, Ford Ranger, Mazda Pickups, and the Ford Aerostar
Yeah, I kind of decided not to run that again, I do have a huge stack of receipts in the garage, but I know I`ve misplaced some. Axle re-builds with lockers are close to 2 grand each alone. and then I busted them and had to throw out another 900. I`m at least another 7000-7500 cdn above my original mod tally now. -at least. Total investment including purcase over the years? 30,000+ ?
Getting the truck insured pretty soon after hibernating it for a few months. I have a rancho stabilizer shock coming for an attempt to run some sort of stabilizer setup on it.
I`m tight for room in there and am considering connecting to the top of the drag link near the TRE then back to the frame. Thing is most D44 axles seem to be stabilized from axle to tie rod. Some vehicles do have a stabilizer off the drag link though.
Does it matter? My gut says you want a stabilizer closest to the force trying to turn the tires.
The reason you see most of them attached to the tie rod is because the tierod only cycles left to right horizontally with no up/ down movement. Your drag link is going to cycle vertically and laterally. If you engineer it right it could be fine, but be sure to consider passenger droop/ stuff and full lock to lock turn in both situations and every situation between. My jeep is attached to the draglink.
Made bracket for the draglink out of 1.5 inch u-bolt muffler style clamps and some angle iron.
Then welded two pieces of angle iron together and welded to my frame.
Yes I know I never do that as a rule in case I want to take everything off again but it was a simple bracket.
Haven't seen it it makes any difference at all, going to take a burn later to check it out. I only had some slight wander on road -bumpsteer. I was mostly hoping to lessen the forces back to my steering box off-road. Anyway, only 1000 more things to do before I just leave it alone I guess!
This turned out kind of neat, turns out the rear camera monitor fits pretty well inside my dash. I cut the dummy vent portion off the trim and then popped the vent mechanism out and trimmed the trim piece a little further -as shown. The monitor actually fits so snug, it is held in place by itself.
The camera kit was a Costco purchase I got for xmas a while back.
The Camera mounts to the inside of the license plate via double sided tape, and looks out from over top of it.
You are supposed to tie into the reverse light circuit for power, but I wired power to it through one of those blue switches you can see in one of the pics.
That way I can turn it on when I want to turn it on.
The camera sends a wireless signal to the video monitor, and had an antenna type lead which transmitted the signal.
Same side I did last time, pass. side knuckle. I pulled into this mud puddle on a trail and actually got hung up on a log in there in a kind of funny way. I did not even notice it right away, till a buddy said only one front was spinning. Anyway, a rather benign looking little obstacle blows my knucle apart like nothing. I did scrabble a bit but didn't get her hopping or anything, just backwards then forwards to try to get more to the left.
I am thinkng a full Detroit up front wasn't the greatest idea. The trip I went on had a lot of driving involved but I only locked the hubs three times. I don't really have a lot of time on that knuckle since my last repair.
I`m having trouble with the idea that as soon as I get into a difficult situation, my knuckles will disintegrate.
I think I am going to pull that detroit out and put in a limited slip or maybe even open.
Wrong terminology, sorry.
Shaft yokes, U-joint, shaft ends, The components inside the knuckle. I guess I am picking up some sort of lazy-ass jargon! (knuckle joints)
Anyway, as you can see, the U-joint is gone and the yokes are smooshed.
I don't know, maybe I should be buying the most expensive U-joints, It would be nice to be able to know what failed first. I`ve never seen everything come apart so evenly.
They almost always do that. Whenever a yoke breaks first, the U-joint will snap with it or when a U-joint snaps first, the yoke will go with it too. And chances are, it didnt shatter at the same time / evenly - you probably kept the driveline moving after the first crack which then resulted in breaking off the opposite end.
I'd get another stock long side inner and stub shaft along with a Spicer 760X u-joint and tack weld the caps in and see how that goes before I would spend piles of money on chromo shafts and high zoot u-joints, but that's just me.
Yeah, also the shaft wants to slide out when the U-joint is gone, and it can contact the outer shaft yoke so whatever is left will grind on each other.
I'd get another stock long side inner and stub shaft along with a Spicer 760X u-joint and tack weld the caps in and see how that goes before I would spend piles of money on chromo shafts and high zoot u-joints, but that's just me.
I just might try that. I threw some cheap U-joints in there previously, that was probably a mistake. Just a small tack to keep the caps in there too huh?
-I had a great time this weekend anyway, I`ll put some pics up soon in my Canadian backroads thread.
They'll pop when they want to. I've done it to the short side twice, with a limited slip. The first time it didn't have very much weight on it at all, either.
If they dont use a full circle clip, they at least have to use the little moon clip. The little moon clips are bad about jumping off and letting the cap pop out. Once a cap goes, the joint will bind up in the ear and still work until something breaks.
You can machine stock shafts to accept a full circle clip, but i dont like doing it as it makes a weak spot on what is already a weak shaft. Tacking the caps on works, i do a triangle of 3 really hot tacks and take your time inbetween doing each one so you dont burn the seals out of the joints.