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Pressurized Axles?

4x4e350

Member
292
5
18
Location
Vestaburg, Mi.
I was checking the fluid condition and levels on the 5 ton yesterday, all three axles look like the fluid was just changed, good news!
Anyway, as I removed the plugs on the axles, all three axles released pressure as I was turning the plug out. It wasn't just a little amount, it seemed to be atleast a few psi. I would'nt of thought much about it, but it just seemed odd to me that all axles had the pressure.
All my axle vents are just the little nipples with a cap on top, so no hoses or special fording kit. Do the axle vents have some type of check valve, so they wont release pressure till a certain amount of psi is built up? Or should I remove all the vents, and make sure they aren't plugged?
 

Maverick1701

Well-known member
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181
63
Location
Lubbock, TX
my valves were so gummed up they wouldnt function. I had to clean them pretty well...eventually I just made my own vent lines and solved the problem.
 

BadMastard

New member
392
5
0
Location
Duvall, Wa.
One quick note, I had something similar on my M35A3, BUT it wasn't pressure, it was vacuum. The cap worked beautifully on venting, but not so good on allowing air back in. Just a thought.
 

73m819

Rock = older than dirt , GA. MAFIA , Dirty
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In Memorial
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gainesville, ga.
One quick note, I had something similar on my M35A3, BUT it wasn't pressure, it was vacuum. The cap worked beautifully on venting, but not so good on allowing air back in. Just a thought.
This is the problem with these valves, thay ONLY work one way, pressure out, sucking crap in, it is a lot better just throw all 6 away, install hose bibs, tees, then use vaccum line run to the fire wall with a cheap gas filiter on the end
 

cranetruck

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Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Meadows of Dan, Virginia
This is the problem with these valves, thay ONLY work one way, pressure out, sucking crap in, it is a lot better just throw all 6 away, install hose bibs, tees, then use vaccum line run to the fire wall with a cheap gas filiter on the end
Went a bit further and hooked all of them to the low pressure regulator, so everything can either be vented or pressurized...
 

abh3

New member
236
3
0
Location
Florala, Al
What a great idea. My old Landrover always seemed to get water in the axles when wading after some driving but not so much cold, I always wondered if the axles cooling off rapidly in the water created a vacuum that sucked the water past the seals. Eventually I just did away with the vent thingies and ran hose up to the aircleaner to avoid mud plugging vents/hoses altogether, dirt-dauber problems, etc...
 

cranetruck

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Meadows of Dan, Virginia
About the one-way breather vents, don't know where I have seen it, but there are specific instructions about letting the axles cool off before entering water for that exact reason (sucking water through seals when the hot air cools off).
 

kastein

Member
495
26
18
Location
Southbridge MA
I'd love to see a cheap air pressure regulator that can put out ~1/10 of a psi of air for pressurizing the axles, transfer case, transmission, etc... why? If I find myself in deep water I would rather be blowing a tiny bit of lube out than taking any amount of water in. Haven't been able to find any regulators that will go low enough to not blow out every seal though.
 

Squirt-Truck

Master Chief
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Marietta, Georgia
McMaster-Carr sells regulators that will meet your <1/2 psig requirement. They go up to 5 psig and are fully adjustable.
 
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cranetruck

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Meadows of Dan, Virginia
I'd love to see a cheap air pressure regulator that can put out ~1/10 of a psi of air for pressurizing the axles, transfer case, transmission, etc... why? If I find myself in deep water I would rather be blowing a tiny bit of lube out than taking any amount of water in. Haven't been able to find any regulators that will go low enough to not blow out every seal though.
You will need more than 1/10 psi to keep the water out. Pressure increases by about 1/2psi/ft... The pressure for the deuce should be about 3 psi.
 

cranetruck

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Super Moderator
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Location
Meadows of Dan, Virginia
Thanks for the info. What do you do about the alternator when
in deep water?

Thanks, Orren
Nothing, the electronics is protected by a gasket. Fording is not supposed to take place for a long period, it's over in a matter of minutes, so if the alternator doesn't produce during that time, no harm is done.
The older, generator regulator system was water proof and for vehicles designed to swim (typ m656), the alternator was pressurized with air like the axle housings etc.
 
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