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Some weekend flex


Phantom

Well-Known Member
Joined
Jul 13, 2013
Messages
94
City
Salida CA
Vehicle Year
1988
Transmission
Automatic
Short shake down run
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Found some small bugs to workout, should have it solid for summer runs..



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Nice clean rig, good moves too :icon_thumby:
 
how do you like the creepy crawlers?, put some jeep springs on that thing! good looking rig tho.
 
how do you like the creepy crawlers?, put some jeep springs on that thing! good looking rig tho.

I really like the tires, had them in mud, snow, and ice. They worked really well in all, still need to try them on the rocks, but I think they will perform as good or better in the rocks. You say jeep coils in the front? I had a set up their, but they seemed way too soft, body roll was ridiculous. Can you recommend the correct spring?
 
Lookin good!

You cannot go with a soft spring with TTB without it getting tippy. There is no forced articulation to hold the rig upright and softer springs will make it worse. I built up to 16" of travel with TTB fullsize Bronco and 37's. Snapped three u-joints with 37's Dana 44 TTB playing in the rocks. TTB is good for mild rocks and going fast, not for crawlin'. Wait till you drop one of the front tires off a rock or into a hole. You are counting on the spring to hold you up and catch you when it is extended and can't. A solid axle is forced down when the other side is pushed up and will catch you.
 
Lookin good!

You cannot go with a soft spring with TTB without it getting tippy. There is no forced articulation to hold the rig upright and softer springs will make it worse. I built up to 16" of travel with TTB fullsize Bronco and 37's. Snapped three u-joints with 37's Dana 44 TTB playing in the rocks. TTB is good for mild rocks and going fast, not for crawlin'. Wait till you drop one of the front tires off a rock or into a hole. You are counting on the spring to hold you up and catch you when it is extended and can't. A solid axle is forced down when the other side is pushed up and will catch you.

Thinking I will sas it next winter. Thanks for your input.
 
Good luck with it. I'd have it, but got my Ranger.
 
If you look around on here you will find many doing all sorts of crawling with a TTB and minimal carnage.
 
If you look around on here you will find many doing all sorts of crawling with a TTB and minimal carnage.

I didn't say you couldn't, but within reason for the size of your running gear. I'll stand by my opinions and have the experience of having built-up the TTB and having run both that TTB and did a SAS in my old Bronco.

How big can you go with these Ranger/Bronco/Explorer TTB and keep axle breakage and u-joint breakage down?
 
How deep are your pockets?
 
35-36" is about the normal top end of a D35 but of course there are guys that can break a hammer playing in a sandbox and guys that can get away with almost anything.

It is comparable in strength to the D44 since it can run the same u joints. Ford put cheaper ones in it but D44 ones fit perfectly, I just put them in mine to replace the 20 year old ones.
 
This I built and is as deep as I got in to my pockets :icon_thumby::

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40" tars, 609 front ARB, Sterling rear ARB, 5:38 gears, Atlas II/NP205 doubler, ZF 5 spd, one ton driveshafts, Kenne bell Blowzilla at 9lbs of boost, 393W blah blah blah, it rocked. I hurt my back and lost a job and parted it out.
 
Obviously one ton stuff is going to be stronger, not that many make the jump in RBV land. Some do but it isn't the norm.
 
Obviously one ton stuff is going to be stronger, not that many make the jump in RBV land. Some do but it isn't the norm.

Yes Mr. Obvious
My old one ton stuff wasn't the point I was trying to make.

The point being that I wheeled both TTB and a Solid axle set-ups. I was a die hard TTB go fast guy till I started rock crawling. I went to the solid axle after a few, Oh shit moments out rocking with TTB. Just saying, my opinion, and from my experience. I only posted-up my old crawler as evidence of experience.

So you can put lipstick on a pig, add stronger joints, but you still have a smaller carrier, gears and axles in a Dana35. You can't expect the strength of a Dana44, not anymore than you can build up a Dana44 to the strength of a Dana 60. That doesn't stop us from trying and upgrades like u-joints do make a difference. I put the lipstick on the TTB Dana44 with locker, broke the axle slip shaft and installed a Dana 60 axle slip shaft. Then I went to a Dana44 SAS then added Ox U-joints after I snapped a couple of D44 u-joints.on 37's.
 
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Your TTB D44 kept blowing u-joints, how much does a bronco weigh? How much does a RBV weigh? How much hp did your Bronco have? How much power does a typical RBV have? D35 uses the same cross... which is also the same cross used in solid D44's. So unless you go D60 or dip heavily into the aftermarket you really are not gaining anything for strength aside from wheel bearings and brakes by going to a solid D44... but people put D44 knuckles on their D35's which would take that out of the picture too.
 

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