• Welcome Visitor! Please take a few seconds and Register for our forum. Even if you don't want to post, you can still 'Like' and react to posts.

D35 spider gears


footee

Well-Known Member
Joined
Sep 4, 2007
Messages
132
City
Kansas City, MO area
Vehicle Year
1996
Transmission
Manual
After pulling my diff out, I noticed my spider gears are all sheared off. I’ve searched all over for a new set and the closest I’ve found is on eBay but they say they only work though ‘93. My truck is a ‘97. Will those work? I thought all internals are the same on the d35.
 
There are two different "hub"sizes. Hub - referring to the part the slips into the sides of the carrier. For whatever stupid reason, it's referred to as "ABS" and "NON-ABS" carriers (that I've come across). To make matters worse, it seems irrelevant as to if you have ABS or not, and either carrier can be swapped with one another without issue.

You'll need to use either good calipers or micrometers (overkill, but if the latter is more convenient) to check what you have and verify that with the seller.

I had this problem when I went to install a Aussie locker some years ago. The sides wouldn't fit my case.

Truth be told though, you're probably better off pulling a new-to-you complete diff housing from a local wrecking yard from a truck that has the same gearing. And it'll be open to inspect the condition of everything on that one too.

http://www.therangerstation.com/how-to/axles/ford-7-5-8-8-inch-axle-tag-door-codes/

As a final insurance that you have the correct ratio, there will be two numbers stamped on the ring gear.

Ex:
10-41 ; This would bean a 4.10 ratio, 41/10=4.10
or
32-9 ; This would mean a 3.55 ratio, 32/9=3.55

There's no standard as to which number comes first, just divide the larger by the smaller and verify that with your old gearset.
 
Last edited:
If it comes down to it, I have a set from my 93 that were removed when I installed different gears and locker. I can take measurements to verify sizes if needed.

What's available here is:

Side gears, spider gears and ring and pinion ic necessary. 3.73 ratio from 1993 ranger, single cab. No abs on front. Let me know ok w ic you need something.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 
When I went back to check the eBay listing, I read it further and it specified 84-93 Jeep Dana 35 then in parenthses, all ford. So is it safe to assume they are all, in fact, the same for the Ranger 35? I was thinking about going to the junk yard for a full diff as a last resort. I may have to rebuild my diff anyway as the ring and pinion are seized. I haven’t pulled the carrier yet to inspect. There was a ton of water in it also, so it obviously needs new seals at the very least.
 
I'm not enough of an expert to say they are all the same. In my opinion, if it was full of water, I would do a full rebuild. What ratio do you need?

If you want mine, make an offer. Shipping will be from Piedmont, SC. The truck they came out of had about 160,000 miles on it. But the owner for the first 150,000 ( my brother in law) rarely, if ever put it in 4wd. I would estimate these gears have less than 1000 miles of use.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk
 
Oh no, they have differences. I ended up selling that Aussie locker to a member in Alaska who had a similar issue but the lunchbox locker he had purchased had the opposite problem, it was too small for his carrier.

*edit: Tried searching for my old thread on it that had measurements. I think that may have actually been way back on the old forums before we lost them. Sad times, there was a LOT of good information lost on that deal.
 
Last edited:
D35 TTB spider gears are all the same. The only different ones would be found in the HYBRID D35 axle. For those that dont know, the hybrid D35 is pretty much found in all none 4.0 RBVs starting in 1993 and essentially uses the smaller D28 carrier and gear set in a D35 housing. D35 carrier = 27 spline spider gears, D28 carrier = smaller, 23(?) spline spider gears.
 
D35 TTB spider gears are all the same. The only different ones would be found in the HYBRID D35 axle. For those that dont know, the hybrid D35 is pretty much found in all none 4.0 RBVs starting in 1993 and essentially uses the smaller D28 carrier and gear set in a D35 housing. D35 carrier = 27 spline spider gears, D28 carrier = smaller, 23(?) spline spider gears.

Please read the post above. There ARE differences. I have personally came across them, not just heard about them on the internet.

The hybrid axle is rare, and is pretty much non existent after 1993.

If your housing has fins on the bottom, it's not the hybrid.
 
I'm not enough of an expert to say they are all the same. In my opinion, if it was full of water, I would do a full rebuild. What ratio do you need?

If you want mine, make an offer. Shipping will be from Piedmont, SC. The truck they came out of had about 160,000 miles on it. But the owner for the first 150,000 ( my brother in law) rarely, if ever put it in 4wd. I would estimate these gears have less than 1000 miles of use.

Sent from my SM-G960U using Tapatalk


where i would disagree here....if it was full of water and locked up....throw it away. theres still plenty of pigs to go around in the scrapyards.

Please read the post above. There ARE differences. I have personally came across them, not just heard about them on the internet.

The hybrid axle is rare, and is pretty much non existent after 1993.

If your housing has fins on the bottom, it's not the hybrid.



this is true. hybrid not common.

but there are lsd carriers that wont work with the aussie. i used to gut d35's quite a bit just to get the spiders.....i broke them allot with brake bias because the aussie broke shafts too much and i drive in 4x4 on the road so open diff over full locker was better.... i dont remember having issues mixing them up all of the time if i kept them as a set...roll pin cross pin and gears.... though some did have bigger washers. and the tooth counts were not always the same so keep them as a set. the pinions would be 9 on some and 10 on others...wierd shit like that.
 
The hybrid axle is rare, and is pretty much non existent after 1993.

What do you mean? The hybrid D35 was never even made before 1993 lol. After 1993 practically all 3.0 rangers had hybrids in them & every '93+ 2.3 4x4 had a hybrid D35 in it :icon_confused:
 
I'm really sure mine is not a hybrid according to all the research I did before my project. I had no trouble ordering and installing an Aussie locker in it and also had someone install a 4.56 gear set from Yukon.

1993, 3.0L, 4x4, Splash (single cab short bed stepside), M50D, 1354E
 
I believe 3.0L trucks with an automatic trans were more likely to get the hybrid axle than manual-equipped ones (this certainly is the case if it came with a 3.45:1 ratio). However nearly all (if not all) 2.3L trucks made between 1993-1997 got the hybrid axle.

And ×2, the hybrid axle did not exist prior to 1993. It's use was confined to the '93-'97 years.
 
Do I need to use a spreader to get the carrier out and back in or can I get away with not using one? I’m not changing the ring and pinion or the carrier itself, just all the bearings. I plan to use the same shins too.

I have a full 35, not a hybrid. I found an old carrier I had from a ‘92 with good spiders, I plan to use those in my carrier, then all new bearings and seals.
 
It helps but it's not necessary. Usually the factory shims are a single solid piece and not the stackable kind, at least for all the diffs I've been into. Saves on costs thanks to volume assembly. They're a little more robust than the stack-able ones but you still shouldn't whack 'em too hard.

The same shims should work. I actually replaced a GM 14 bolt Gov-bomb with an Eaton E-locker with the factory shims and new bearings, the backlash didn't change a wink. So if that doesn't change, and you didn't monkey with anything else like the pinion, you're set.

I have been under the impression that the hybrid was more or less only confined to 1993 as to use up inventory, and Ford had enough left that they decided it was cost effective to make a special housing to do so. Thus my comment earlier of "Pretty much non existent after 1993", as in, '94/'95/etc, it wasn't around, and especially by the time of the 1995 update when the front axle got better brakes. You guys are trying too hard to read between the lines. I've seen several 3.0L trucks with the true D35, stick and auto, in fact, of all the Rangers I've ever crawled around, I've never seen a hybrid in person.
 
I have been under the impression that the hybrid was more or less only confined to 1993 as to use up inventory, and Ford had enough left that they decided it was cost effective to make a special housing to do so. Thus my comment earlier of "Pretty much non existent after 1993", as in, '94/'95/etc, it wasn't around, and especially by the time of the 1995 update when the front axle got better brakes. You guys are trying too hard to read between the lines. I've seen several 3.0L trucks with the true D35, stick and auto, in fact, of all the Rangers I've ever crawled around, I've never seen a hybrid in person.

All you need to do is look under a '93-'97 2.3L 4x4 (hopefully it's PO didn't swap in a real D35 just to throw us off lol). There are indeed hybrids (officially still called a Dana28) all the way thru '97 with the twin-piston brakes out there (Dana BOM# 610484 for example).

2.3L 4x4s are not overly common, so maybe why you haven't noticed one yet.
 
Last edited:

Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad

TRS Events

Member & Vendor Upgrades

For a small yearly donation, you can support this forum and receive a 'Supporting Member' banner, or become a 'Supporting Vendor' and promote your products here. Click the banner to find out how.

Recently Featured

Want to see your truck here? Share your photos and details in the forum.

Ranger Adventure Video

TRS Merchandise

Follow TRS On Instagram

TRS Sponsors


Sponsored Ad


Sponsored Ad


Amazon Deals

Sponsored Ad

Back
Top