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i prefer to do it the way axle shops do it,and you can buy machined stock pretty cheap and then have it for checking bearing saddles,etc.since so much was destroyed i would want to rule it out.the rear end WILL wear out prematurely if the housing is bent.as far as a bent axle causing the pull,that would probably show up on an alignment as set back in the rear.i was just telling him the correct way to check the housing though i'm leaning twards what spafford said about suspension problems.You don't actually need a straight rod, just pull BOTH axle shafts and sight through.
Even a slight bend in the tubes is OBVIOUS.
Yes, sighting through the tubes fails to give you a measurement,
but trust me if you can't see the bend by looking through then it
isn't relevant to anyone other than someone racing at Bonneville.
AD
i prefer to do it the way axle shops do it,and you can buy machined stock pretty cheap and then have it for checking bearing saddles,etc.since so much was destroyed i would want to rule it out.the rear end WILL wear out prematurely if the housing is bent.as far as a bent axle causing the pull,that would probably show up on an alignment as set back in the rear.i was just telling him the correct way to check the housing though i'm leaning twards what spafford said about suspension problems.
with so much other stuff bent its a good idea to do it right.you can sight down the tubes but you can check the flanges at the ends of the axle tube with a rod and a right angle square.if the wheels were bent then the backing plates or flanges could be bent also.it doesn't seem like he's dealing with an OBVIOUS pretsel bend.i deal with a lot of collisions and it isen't always readily apparent.anyway its all bench racing under the bridge since hes getting a new rear end.Yeah, you can do it the way axle shops do it, but you
can see the vast majority of bent tubes the way I outlined.
And save yourself the effort.
what the straight machined rod is for is to verify that one
you BELIEVE is straight really IS straight.
One that is OVBIOUSLY BENT is a waste of time to test
more precisely.
It's like doing an autopsy on someone you and fifty other witnesses WATCHED blow their own brains out with a shotgun.
This why I suggested a quick and dirty "field test".
My test will tell you QUICKLY if further testing is justified.
If it isn't OBVIOUSLY bent then it simply can't be causing
the problem described.
AD
he was going to take it to a shop to have it checked before he got a new axle.if i was going to pay i'de do it right but its irrelevant as the axle is going to the wrecker.if its visibly bent then theres no need to measure,that of course is obvious. like allen said if it looks good then you might use the rod to double check.also you'd have a hard time checking the flanges without a strait edge.i'm not suggesting you mike a cylinder bore with a piston hanging out the sideAs Allan said, do the quick and dirty test first, and if you know it's bent with that, stop.
This gives you one of two results:
1. Bad
2. Unknown
If it's bad, it's bad. If you don't know, THEN you go through the trouble of a more precise test.
This is very standard troubleshooting. Another example is, don't bother spending your $40 or $50 to Magnaflux your 2.9L heads if you can SEE cracks in them.