LeftHander
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2013
- Messages
- 25
- Reaction score
- 9
- Points
- 3
- Location
- Milpitas, CA
- Vehicle Year
- 1996
- Make / Model
- Ford Ranger SC
- Engine Type
- 3.0 V6
- Engine Size
- 3.0
- Transmission
- Manual
- 2WD / 4WD
- 2WD
Bought the truck a few years back, had some vibration at speed, figured that the well worn tires were unbalanced. Looked hard for a center carrier bearing, found a NOS one at the local driveshaft shop. Felt the same as old one, but replaced it anyway.
Bought 4 new tires, got worse. Multiple attempts to get the tire shop to address the issue. Balance machine problems, tires out of weight spec, tires not round. Replace with another brand, same vibration issue. Found BOTH axle shafts bent. Ford used cheap, soft steel that year. Bought best axles from Rock Auto. Still vibrated. 3rd set of tires now! Looked for one piece driveshaft, but the western chain junkyard PnPull damages all of them with their forklift when moving them.
Rotated driveshaft to all 8 positions on pinion plate, no improvement found. I pulled the shaft, and potted the carrier center bearing to reduce the movement, as both bearing assemblies I have on hand have developed a lot of movement in the rubber. (Had to do this on my 1st Gen Talon. TWO carriers, 3 shafts.) Made a noticeable difference, but still not good enough.
Replaced 7.5 rear axle assembly with 8.8 rear. Replaced all three seals with axle assy in the bed. Big mistake, I suspect. Rear rotated/fell onto pinion shaft with plate/nut off, and shoved the pinion inside rear. May have rotated shaft when this happened, and I suspect the gears may have "jumped" a tooth or two.
QUESTION: How is the pinion plate aligned to the differential assembly for driveshaft balance alignment?
I haven't seen any info on this, anywhere, which seems odd, as Ford is careful to matchmark the driveshaft location on the plate.
I'm thinking the 1/8 rotation between the original and the 2nd bolt pattern is not a fine enough change, and I should be pulling the plate and rotating it a spline or two to look for a better alignment. I should probably count the teeth on the pinion gear and calculate the rotation per tooth, to get a better idea of what may have happened when it got bonked.
BTW, the tire shop is America's Tire. I suspect they may be selling "seconds", as it seems odd that so many of multiple sets of tires in two brands have an out-of-round condition. I was thinking of having them shaved to eliminate that as a factor in getting a handle on this vibration, but after measuring the tread depth, I realized that they would hit the wear bars before getting them round, and liability concerns would stop them. Tires wore pretty quickly. I'm wondering if the roundness problem might have been a factor in them wearing down so fast. Not going back, as they had a limited selection of the old Ranger tire size, 225/70-14. I did swap a set of 15" wheels/tires from my '00 4x4 Ranger onto the rear for a test drive, but the vibration was about the same.
I'm thinking the vibration problem is pinion plate misalignment, and/or driveshaft carrier bearing movement, but I'm not knowledgeable enough on the subject, and I hear that this sort of vibration problem is fairly common on Rangers. Is it only the Supercabs, or do the other models also have a similar complaint?
Bought 4 new tires, got worse. Multiple attempts to get the tire shop to address the issue. Balance machine problems, tires out of weight spec, tires not round. Replace with another brand, same vibration issue. Found BOTH axle shafts bent. Ford used cheap, soft steel that year. Bought best axles from Rock Auto. Still vibrated. 3rd set of tires now! Looked for one piece driveshaft, but the western chain junkyard PnPull damages all of them with their forklift when moving them.
Rotated driveshaft to all 8 positions on pinion plate, no improvement found. I pulled the shaft, and potted the carrier center bearing to reduce the movement, as both bearing assemblies I have on hand have developed a lot of movement in the rubber. (Had to do this on my 1st Gen Talon. TWO carriers, 3 shafts.) Made a noticeable difference, but still not good enough.
Replaced 7.5 rear axle assembly with 8.8 rear. Replaced all three seals with axle assy in the bed. Big mistake, I suspect. Rear rotated/fell onto pinion shaft with plate/nut off, and shoved the pinion inside rear. May have rotated shaft when this happened, and I suspect the gears may have "jumped" a tooth or two.
QUESTION: How is the pinion plate aligned to the differential assembly for driveshaft balance alignment?
I haven't seen any info on this, anywhere, which seems odd, as Ford is careful to matchmark the driveshaft location on the plate.
I'm thinking the 1/8 rotation between the original and the 2nd bolt pattern is not a fine enough change, and I should be pulling the plate and rotating it a spline or two to look for a better alignment. I should probably count the teeth on the pinion gear and calculate the rotation per tooth, to get a better idea of what may have happened when it got bonked.
BTW, the tire shop is America's Tire. I suspect they may be selling "seconds", as it seems odd that so many of multiple sets of tires in two brands have an out-of-round condition. I was thinking of having them shaved to eliminate that as a factor in getting a handle on this vibration, but after measuring the tread depth, I realized that they would hit the wear bars before getting them round, and liability concerns would stop them. Tires wore pretty quickly. I'm wondering if the roundness problem might have been a factor in them wearing down so fast. Not going back, as they had a limited selection of the old Ranger tire size, 225/70-14. I did swap a set of 15" wheels/tires from my '00 4x4 Ranger onto the rear for a test drive, but the vibration was about the same.
I'm thinking the vibration problem is pinion plate misalignment, and/or driveshaft carrier bearing movement, but I'm not knowledgeable enough on the subject, and I hear that this sort of vibration problem is fairly common on Rangers. Is it only the Supercabs, or do the other models also have a similar complaint?