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ATTN: guys running xj coils


Hopefully it will have the fixed front yoke. If not, I wouldn't bother getting it.

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damn. I just got home maybe 1.5hr ago...It's a slip yoke.
 
Pretty much KCK.

That's Kansas City, Kansas. I see you're from Indiana. So if you're coming to the Nascar race on April 22nd, I'm just west of the racetrack maybe 12miles.
 
You need at least 4 inches of lift to keep the pumpkin from smaking the crossmember.

I am at roughly 4-5" of lift with a D60 which has a lot more pumpkin than a D30. I can tell you without a doubt you can clear a D30 at stock ride height. Mainly because the D35 TTB has the pumpkin in the same spot a D30 would and it is in fact larger. A D44 will be similar.
 
my truck's currently a 2wd, so that might make some difference.

So what's the #1 problem I'll run into having a slip yoke front driveshaft? Is it just the likelihood of tearing something up because of how the yoke engages in the case? Like stripping the teeth when it gets in a bind? Or is it just the likelihood of it falling out of the case when I put my front suspension in extreme angles? Total newb here. I'm not building this to be a trail warrior. I really am just trying to have a project to just teach myself fabrication skills, and to have something I can drive in the winter when mother nature dumps a ton of snow on us.

Sure I might take it to the trail once a year or something, but the nearest one is 1.5hr away and I don't have the resources to trailer it. I'd be more likely to go muddin' on a whim with my buddies, likely about 1 a year.
 
Ok. I see what you want to do. A daily driver with mild off-road use.
The problem with the slip shaft is that the u-joint at the transfer case end is really small. Smaller than a 1210 u-joint. But, for mostly street use it should be fine.
Since you don't plan on any hardcore wheeling and tons of suspension articulation I don't think the driveshaft will fall out. Deciplerocks used the same t-case and front driveshaft and never had a problem. And he wheeled it hard.

What size tires do you plan to run?
Did you get the front driveshaft with the transfer case? If you didn't, I have one sittingin my garage collecting dust.

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Ok. I see what you want to do. A daily driver with mild off-road use.
The problem with the slip shaft is that the u-joint at the transfer case end is really small. Smaller than a 1210 u-joint. But, for mostly street use it should be fine.
Since you don't plan on any hardcore wheeling and tons of suspension articulation I don't think the driveshaft will fall out. Deciplerocks used the same t-case and front driveshaft and never had a problem. And he wheeled it hard.

What size tires do you plan to run?
Did you get the front driveshaft with the transfer case? If you didn't, I have one sittingin my garage collecting dust.

My build is very very similar to CollinrMitchel(?)'s but I'm still going back and forth between coils and leafs.

Either 33x12.50s or 305/70/16s...I still need a front driveshaft, what do you want for it?
 
Im currently running the BW1350 with the front slip yoke and all has been fine for me. Only thing was it costed me $140 to have my shaft extended (and they just ended up making a new one and reused the ends) but have not had any binding in it and I have 5 inches of lift in the front and even flexed out it hasnt shown any signs of slipping out.

Im currently running 32x12.50x15 M/T tires.
 
The problem with the slip shaft is that the u-joint at the transfer case end is really small. Smaller than a 1210 u-joint.

So in theory one could get a machine shop to machine the splined portion of the yoke to accept a bigger u-joint and circumvent this issue.
 
Or one could get a transfercase with either a fixed yoke or a flange and make life easier, cheaper and stronger in the end.

I do agree, the ujont is small (currently have one) but a few weeks ago when my truck was only FWD (I broke the rear output yoke), I was doing FWD burnouts with it and it held up just fine plus did 100+ miles of mixed driving with it.

heres a picture of my front driveshaft right went I got it back from being extended 2 inches (aka a new shaft with the factory ends reused) the front ujoint that has the duct tape is a 1310 ujoint.

Driveshaft1.jpg
 
So in theory one could get a machine shop to machine the splined portion of the yoke to accept a bigger u-joint and circumvent this issue.

I guess you could. Depending on the cost.

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I know it might not be the most feasible proposition...I mean, it might be more cost effective to find another tcase in the long run, but I have buddies/connections inside of machine shops that I might be able to get them to do this fairly reasonable or something.
 
I know it might not be the most feasible proposition...I mean, it might be more cost effective to find another tcase in the long run, but I have buddies/connections inside of machine shops that I might be able to get them to do this fairly reasonable or something.

I say just run the stock driveshaft and if it starts giving you problems then get a custom one made.



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that's probably what I'll do, unless I have to get a custom driveshaft made, I might just have the shop weld a larger connection for a larger u-joint at the same time.
 
I say run what you have. Look for a 1354m and swap it at that time. Then you can use an explorer front driveshaft.

Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk 2
 

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