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Gear oil level in axles?

ckouba

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How do you check the gear oil level in the axles? I put "some" back in after the hub delete but want to make sure I have "enough" in there. Should it be level with the fill plug? A certain distance below?

Can anyone point me to the correct TM passage?

Specifically for a 2000 M1088A1.

Thanks in advance!
 

Mullaney

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How do you check the gear oil level in the axles? I put "some" back in after the hub delete but want to make sure I have "enough" in there. Should it be level with the fill plug? A certain distance below?

Can anyone point me to the correct TM passage?

Specifically for a 2000 M1088A1.

Thanks in advance!
.
You could be dead nut level with the fill plug and be okay,
OR
You could reach in with your finger (bend the first nuckle) and touch oil and still be perfect too. That measurement would be about a half inch down.
 

chucky

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Yea what he said lol fill the main chunk up till its to the bottom of the fill hole and on your hubs put the fill plug of the hub to 4 oclock and fill till its about to run out and your set !
 

Ronmar

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Port angeles wa
Manual says the diff level is acceptable if within 1" of the bottom of the fill hole.
I forget where that is exactly, will have to look it up.

The rear hubs are tied to the axle pumpkin so will ultimately find their own level, and any excess will flow bacl along the axle To the pumpkin. But good idea to add some to them initially so the outer bearings start out wet.

For the fronts, rotate the hub filler plug, or the mount hole you are using as a filler hole on the Eco Hub, to the 4 Oclock position and fill till oil just runs back out. This should approximate the oil level that the rear hub outer bearings run at...
 

GeneralDisorder

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Portland, OR
With the ECO hubs having a smaller oil capacity and since there's no gears to fling it around I filled mine to the 3 o-clock position (halfway). I don't want the bearing becoming uncovered during long drives at speed since that will cause the oil to collect in a ring around the circumference of the hub and there is no spinning gear set to disrupt that oil ring being held by centrifugal force.
 
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