Ok, so it's well-established where the Saginaw axles break. Anybody broken a large amount of GKN axles that could tell me where they're likely to break?
Ok, so it's well-established where the Saginaw axles break. Anybody broken a large amount of GKN axles that could tell me where they're likely to break?
Jon J.
1989 Daytona ES 2.4L DOHC
2003 Neon SXT - gone but never forgotten
If it ain't broke, fix it 'till it is!
Just want to follow along.
I break lots of parts store axles, I would like a cheaper solution than the expensive ones. So I am also here to follow along. (L body specific)
Kidding of course (kinda). Jeff, since GKN seems to be the most common variety for the L-bodies, where are yours breaking specifically? The axle tube or within the joint?
I run the later model V6 axles whenever I can. Are you running a 525 or a newer trans?
Interesting. I'm running a 555. The reason that I'm asking is because I did something stupid and I'm now running an Autozone driver's side axle. I haven't exactly put any track passes on it yet, but so far so good. It has the extruded inner joint housing, so I'm guessing it's a rebuilt GKN. I really hope I can find someplace to rebuild my trusty Saginaw axle, but until then, I've got a nicely-painted axle of questionable quality stuffed in there. I had them look up an axle for a Daytona Shelby, and the GKN is what I got. As far as I know, the Shelby cars (other than the L-bodies) got Saginaw axles, but Autozone wouldn't know anything about that.
Jon J.
1989 Daytona ES 2.4L DOHC
2003 Neon SXT - gone but never forgotten
If it ain't broke, fix it 'till it is!
oh I have life time axles. ive gone through so many its shameful. Most of the time I break the inner tri pod cup at least that seems to be the most common lately. when I get solid shaft replacements I snap the shaft itself quite a bit. Ive broken quite a few tri pods them selves too. I was under the assumption that I would just never launch the car again, but a few weeks ago I twisted an inner joint apart during a 3rd-4th pull.
I'm not pushing huge power, but I've got a damn heavy car, and those unequal-length Saginaw axles with 180,000+ miles on them never let me down. If I wasn't such a retard, I wouldn't be having this conversation, but I ended up ruining one when it was out of the car. I guess it was a blessing in disguise because I found the tripod spring in 3 pieces when I took it apart.
Jon J.
1989 Daytona ES 2.4L DOHC
2003 Neon SXT - gone but never forgotten
If it ain't broke, fix it 'till it is!
I have been having a terrible problem with every axle I install popping a leak in the boot and dumping grease No way I want to spend my time draining transmissions and swapping axles constantly just so I can have free replacements. I gotta figure with the lifetime warranty they either stop selling axles for us....or the demand keeps up production
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I have found that some P-body axles are the right length for an L-body, for you guys running newer trannies in your Omni/Charger. I built and sold one to a guy in Quebec with a Shelby Charger (shelbymonster I think?) and he said it held up good even on slicks.
I tried a 2nd Gen Neon axle once but it was too long for an L-body. Worked fine in my Daytona though.
I was poking around on RockAuto to see if they had different listings for V6 axles and it doesn't look like they do. I compared my 89 Daytona to a 95 Lebaron V6 and a 87 Shadow TBI and all of them had the same Cardone axle listed.
Jon J.
1989 Daytona ES 2.4L DOHC
2003 Neon SXT - gone but never forgotten
If it ain't broke, fix it 'till it is!
What you want are the Dynasty axles. Not sure why, but Chrysler made them really beefy. At least that's the scuttle I've heard...
91-up seem to have the best axles.
Wouldn't they be considerably longer than L-body units?
No. I think they still give you a 1/4 inch plunge on each side.
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Parts stores won't be able to supply a specific manufacturer of axles for our cars since there were multiple OEM suppliers. If they interchange, they are sold as the correct part for the cross referenced vehicle regardless of the "style". If you want a specific axle you are going to have to find it and rebuild it yourself or get a local company to rebuild it. The other option is of course custom units.