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Seems like this is turning into a build thread.

CARC686

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Las Cruces, New Mexico
ROYAL PURPLE PERFORMANCE ADVANTAGES
  • Maximizes horsepower
  • Extends gear and bearing life
  • Reduces operating temperature
  • Lower coefficient of friction
  • Superior corrosion protection
  • Separates rapidly from water
  • For use with open, limited-slip and locking differential
  • Contains limited-slip friction modifier
Very impressive claims.

Now where does it say it measurably improves MPGs? :unsure:
I don't care about their claims. I've never read them. What I have done is drive cross country several times with a scan tool plugged into my Toyota while I towed triple the rated capacity and Royal Purple engine oil had my average temperature down by close to 20 degrees over Rotella. It's slick stuff. That energy was being used to push the vehicle instead of being radiated as heat. I'm not a scientist and I'm not interested in marketing. I'm a cynic. I believe what I personally observed over the course of thousands of miles in an extreme duty situation.
 

CARC686

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Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Now if you really wanted to challenge Royal Purple, the tac I would take is, "See you when you come crying about how it was too slick for your hub seals." I understand that to be a gamble and I'm choosing to take it. The good news is the fancy pants diff gasket is reusable.
 

CARC686

Well-known member
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Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
I was pretty skeptical of this drop pan when I bought it, but it was the only one they had at that particular parts house. I must admit I am happy for the engineer of this thing, as he definitely got his revenge, though I'm not sure what I did to earn it. The only way this thing makes sense is if the company producing it makes most of its money selling rags and kitty litter. If you get a chance to own one of these, go ahead and don't.

a600cdfe-29ad-474e-bcac-a7afc45f70ec.jpg

Now if you install a diff cover with recessed hardware like this, you're gonna want to have three studs to put in the top with spacers and nuts so you can properly attach the brackets for the brake lines and stuff. Otherwise, they won't fit. To anybody who doubts the ARB diff cover makes a difference, I can confirm that before I installed it, I did not have any bug bites, but now that I have installed it, I have at least several dozen.

49e4f627-4da5-47f0-8d0f-59c607b4cdcb.jpg

From this personal experience, I can guarantee that installing an ARB diff cover with a Lube Locker gasket and Royal Purple gear oil will lighten your wallet.
 

CARC686

Well-known member
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63
Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Got a decel rumble grumble. Gonna have to open this thing back up, figure out where the diff cover is rubbing, and clearance it. This is the kind of finnicky crap I expect from hodgepodge modifications built out of junk, not expensive aftermarket parts. That's a strike against ARB's permanent record for me.
 

dougco1

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Got a decel rumble grumble. Gonna have to open this thing back up, figure out where the diff cover is rubbing, and clearance it. This is the kind of finnicky crap I expect from hodgepodge modifications built out of junk, not expensive aftermarket parts. That's a strike against ARB's permanent record for me.
It must be that ROYAL PURPLE you used is so slippery that the gears are flying out and rubbing the back of the cover.:oops: There goes your MPGs.:(
 
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CARC686

Well-known member
275
486
63
Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
They were too preoccupied with making clearance for rocks on the trail to leave enough room for my sloppy tolerances. The right thing to do would be to rebuild the diff, but since that's not in my wheelhouse, I'll just have to introduce the cover to a grinder. That's what ARB recommends in this circumstance anyway. This sure is a lot of nonsense to add a drain plug, but it'll pay for itself in saved RTV before my 200th birthday.
 

CARC686

Well-known member
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63
Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
I expected I might not be able to see where it was rubbing, so I had planned to paint the inside of the cover, slap it on dry with a couple bolts, and spin it a few times, but that was not necessary. The hardened gears were just lathing this thing out of the way. I was irritated with how unnecessarily strong the neodymium was in the drain plug, because it made it hard to even get the threads started, but I was glad to have it at this point. Did a good job of collecting up the dust.

Damage.jpeg

Gave it a shave and a haircut.

Clearanced.jpeg

No more noise. I noticed when the fluid came out that it didn't smell like sulfur, but was disappointed that it didn't smell like grape soda either. You'd think they could make it smell like grape soda at $20 a quart. Put it through a coffee filter and poured it back in. Believe it or not, I was able to stick a funnel in the fill plug on the cover and pour the oil in from a three liter soda bottle pushed up behind the fuel tank.

Curses on Royal Purple for not smelling like grape soda and making my gears so slippery that they flew out.
 

dougco1

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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649
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Location
Cooperstown NY
Magnet couldn't get it. Just received a practical demonstration of a tiny surgical needle gun. Basically had to grind the surface off my eyeball to get the iron and rust out. Not my best Friday night. Wear your PPE.
Sorry for your pain.
That nice, bright diff cover is not as shiny as when you first "eyed it" now is it.
 

CARC686

Well-known member
275
486
63
Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Landlord didn't like the way the truck marks its spot. Asked me to put down a drip pan. I did him one better. Thought about flattening it out, but rolling over that hump and coming to rest on the curb is how I know I'm home. The stones will settle into their final resting places without me fussing over it.

Pad.jpeg
 

CARC686

Well-known member
275
486
63
Location
Las Cruces, New Mexico
Got the bumper. Only took 15 weeks and a hundred highway miles visiting a freight terminal. Pretty ridiculous, but I didn't get bent about it. I'm not in a hurry. Quality seems pretty good. I was enjoying figuring out the original shapes of the plates, as they're folded up like origami. The seams that are welded are proper stack-o-dimes, and none of the welds are obscured by the powder coat. It's a low profile rough coat similar in appearance to CARC. I'm going to spray over it with Rapco. Figured it would make a great primer. Must be nice having a full service fab shop. Expensive. I guess that's why they charge so much. There'll be some pictures sooner than later.
 

dougco1

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
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Cooperstown NY
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