BrandonH13
Member
- Joined
- January 7, 2011
- Messages
- 24
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Osawatomie, Kansas
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 04 Limited
I am going to try and tackle this hopefully this weekend.
I know I will need:
some kind of pulley puller
12mm wrench/socket
a new seal and pinion nut
3 quarts fluid
in torque wrench
1 1/8 or 1 1/16 socket
I know you take off the drive line and marks the bolts and then take off the flange and everything. I have been reading and it looks like there is 2 "ways" to find the pre-load.
Some people lift the rear wheels and take them off. Then take the in torque wrench and see how much it takes to spin the rear a couple times.
I have also seen where people just mark the nut and count how many times they make a rotation and then put it back on to this amount.
Which one of this is more "accurate" I dont think I could "crush" the old or new washer if it needs something like 100-400 ft/lbs.
Also I see some people use impacts and others don't also. Any reason for this?
I know I will need:
some kind of pulley puller
12mm wrench/socket
a new seal and pinion nut
3 quarts fluid
in torque wrench
1 1/8 or 1 1/16 socket
I know you take off the drive line and marks the bolts and then take off the flange and everything. I have been reading and it looks like there is 2 "ways" to find the pre-load.
Some people lift the rear wheels and take them off. Then take the in torque wrench and see how much it takes to spin the rear a couple times.
I have also seen where people just mark the nut and count how many times they make a rotation and then put it back on to this amount.
Which one of this is more "accurate" I dont think I could "crush" the old or new washer if it needs something like 100-400 ft/lbs.
Also I see some people use impacts and others don't also. Any reason for this?