LT67
Well-known member
- 655
- 501
- 93
- Location
- Bowdon, GA
Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!
Look at the top leaf spring real close, it's welded....WOW! At first I thought the lock nut failed and the nut just unscrewed itself but then I enlarged it and saw that that the bearing must've failed and somehow came apart and went over the nut! "I noticed there's hardly any fluid in the differential."I'd replace everything on that side and be checking the other side and center section for bearing wear.
I didn't see anything with the spring, what did I miss?
For right now it's sitting on jackstands until I can have someone more qualified than me look at it. If it can be saved, I'll save up the funds to fix it. If not I'll part it out...I had to fix more then 1 rear CUCV axle like that. Only 1 was able to be saved. That axle stub looks like it may be wasted. That thing has been screaming for a while. Shame that is an expensive fix. I am sure the hub is ruined also. I had a local truck shop that had a die to correct the threads. Good Luck report back. This is a good wake up call for others that never bother to do maintenance or double check things. One I had lock up was on a friends and he was leaving my place after putting rear brakes and axle seals in. He made it 5 miles and the right rear locked up from lack of oil after having the hubs apart and the axle leaking. He told me the oil was full. When he got it brought back the right side was on the ground and no oil was coming out till the truck was setting with no wheel on the right leaning. Shame it happened. I hope it all works out.
A 14 bolt FF where I'm at is minimum $800-900... and that's assuming one can be found.I remember buying them CUCV 14 bolt axles in the crates for $400. in the late 90's. Someone has a good axle for you. All you need is the complete rear axle housing. I had a few but no more. It will be an inexpensive repair if you can just find the rear axle complete. Good Luck.
And I'm almost in Alabama.. lolDon't scrap it yet. I might have a deal for you. I have the back half of an M1008. Bought it for the frame section and rear axle. I was going to part out the axle as I needed the locker. The major drawback is that the rear is in NC and I'm limited in my ability to fetch it.
Thank you for the heads up... in the meanwhile it's going to sit on jackstands until funds are available to fix it.Axle Surgeons of Atlanta Inc can replace the spindle on it , if your not in a hurry you can probably get a better deal when they have more work in your area
since they come to you.
Axle Surgeons of Atlanta
2818 Mount Carmel Rd
Hampton, GA 30228
(404) 352-0099
A 14 bolt FF where I'm at is minimum $800-900... and that's assuming one can be found.
These 14 bolt full floaters are not an inexpensive easy find in Ga. Everyone knows what they're worth hence me mentioning that they're going for $800-900...That is one impressive failure.
If those bearings were that badÂ… and that dry, my guess is that the rest of it isn't in primo shape. Watch your local facebook trading post / Craigslist / Pick and Pull (self service wrecking yards). You should be able to get back on the road for a few hundred dollars. Take your time and read up on that axle. It is one of the easiest ones out there to work on and set up gears in. Got to think that axle was in literally millions of pickups and SUVs. Figure out where your local self service wrecking yards are and start shelling out the $2 to get in and walk around. Last week I was at a Pick-and-pull in Redding CA with multiple 14 bolts in it, including a couple of the newer ones with the finned housing. They put them under a boatload of 3/4 ton GMC pickups and SUVs.
With a little reading and some basic tools you can swap your locker into whatever you get, and gears if needed...
I would be lucky to find a bare housing for $250...Wow open diffs around here in great condition , 250.00 all day long. I hope an open diff where you are at is not 800.00 bucks.
The Corp 14 has too be hands down the best pickup rear ever. The units still in service and used for dirt tracks are just great. With the Dana 60 and 70 close behind. One of the most overlooked maintained axles ever. Abuse and punishment, even the brakes have great reputations. But without lubrication, and failure is close behind.
We get it, advertisements are annoying!
Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!