Well, to the best of my knowledge, the inner stub and slip joint are from a D-35. Same as the rest of the axle. I don’t remember ever collecting any D-44 parts other than the two complete straight axles I have and the D-44 TTB that’s in my F-150. I do have some D-28, D-28/35 hybrid, and apparently one set of D-35 parts. I don’t think a D-44 stub would fit in the pumpkin. Everything seems to measure out right except the length.
The stub and slip joint were broken from the TRS-20th trail ride. That I blew out on my second attempt at the first hill climb I came to.
It got me thinking though. I did an internal spring for a C-clip eliminator and when I put the D-35 together I had no reason to suspect anything amiss. So it’s possible I didn’t check and thinking I was pressing against the spring may have forced the axle enough to get it together. The spring was slightly mangled but in tact, but that doesn’t mean a whole lot as it was a short conical spring so it collapses into itself which means I could have flattened it to one coil in height easily. That would be enough to probably force it together. On the street it may not get enough movement to be a serious problem and the tires would absorb some of the restrained movement. When I hit that hill climb in 4-low and probably 2nd and popped the front end up on the rock towards the top, I would have unloaded the front suspension quickly and under power and well, bang I guess. Sounds to me like a rather logical conclusion.
But, if that’s indeed the problem, then that means either I’ve lifted past what my lift brackets can accommodate (which since I can still align it, or at least it was aligned, I don’t think that’s the case, but I could be wrong), or it means that my lift brackets are incorrectly manufactured. The brackets, are James Duff…