n1gzd_plymouth Posted December 25, 2019 Report Posted December 25, 2019 My engine is rebuilt and back in the car. Car runs and drives. Main issue to resolve now is rear end leak (new after changing seals - worse with new seals). Rebecca Quote
Tooljunkie Posted December 25, 2019 Report Posted December 25, 2019 (edited) 4 minutes ago, n1gzd_plymouth said: My engine is rebuilt and back in the car. Car runs and drives. Main issue to resolve now is rear end leak (new after changing seals - worse with new seals). Rebecca Axles, pinion or all 3?nos oem seals should be soaked in oil before installing. some of those older axle housings had a couple seals on axles,and a grease fitting to fill the void between them. Gear lube should be 3/4” to 1” below fill port. also if it has a vent, make sure its not plugged. Edited December 25, 2019 by Tooljunkie Quote
classiccarjack Posted December 25, 2019 Report Posted December 25, 2019 13 minutes ago, Tooljunkie said: Axles, pinion or all 3?nos oem seals should be soaked in oil before installing. some of those older axle housings had a couple seals on axles,and a grease fitting to fill the void between them. Gear lube should be 3/4” to 1” below fill port. also if it has a vent, make sure its not plugged. If she used leather seals, you are 100% correct. I made the same mistake on a 1940 Dodge truck over 30 years ago, I didn't soak my seals in gear oil, and I put grease on them before I installed them. What a messy disaster! Lesson learned LOL Quote
Tooljunkie Posted December 25, 2019 Report Posted December 25, 2019 I just did my front wheel seals on the Fargo. Old stock leather. They soaked up oil instantly. They were thirsty. Quote
Dartgame Posted December 25, 2019 Report Posted December 25, 2019 The old style seals can wear serious grooves in the axle shaft etc. Might be a good idea to examine and install speedy sleeves if they are bad... 1 Quote
dpollo Posted December 28, 2019 Report Posted December 28, 2019 a speedi sleeve makes a nice repair but they are spendy. 1 Quote
Sniper Posted December 28, 2019 Report Posted December 28, 2019 Cheaper than new axles though 1 Quote
n1gzd_plymouth Posted January 27, 2020 Author Report Posted January 27, 2020 On 12/24/2019 at 9:11 PM, classiccarjack said: If she used leather seals, you are 100% correct. I made the same mistake on a 1940 Dodge truck over 30 years ago, I didn't soak my seals in gear oil, and I put grease on them before I installed them. What a messy disaster! Lesson learned LOL diff housing seal. we think corrosion is preventing the new seal from sealing (old seal matched the corrosion). will revisit in spring. Rebecca 1 Quote
Andydodge Posted January 27, 2020 Report Posted January 27, 2020 Personally I would never use leather seals even if they have been soaking for a year in oil............although if there is a groove worn in the axle or whatever the seal rides on then it won't matter what the seals made of it will leak anyway, so a speedie sleeve or similar is required......I'd chase up a neoprene seal but thats just me........andyd 1 Quote
classiccarjack Posted February 5, 2020 Report Posted February 5, 2020 On 1/26/2020 at 7:04 PM, n1gzd_plymouth said: diff housing seal. we think corrosion is preventing the new seal from sealing (old seal matched the corrosion). will revisit in spring. Rebecca I hope that your second attempt will be successful. I have used crocus cloth and 1200 Grit sandpaper to repair rusted shafts. But if there is one available, always try to find a speedy sleeve(seal saver) first. Let us know how things go Rebecca. Quote
Tom Skinner Posted February 5, 2020 Report Posted February 5, 2020 Speedy Sleeves the way to go 2 Quote
55 Fargo Posted February 6, 2020 Report Posted February 6, 2020 On 12/24/2019 at 7:48 PM, n1gzd_plymouth said: My engine is rebuilt and back in the car. Car runs and drives. Main issue to resolve now is rear end leak (new after changing seals - worse with new seals). Rebecca Okay Miss Rebecca how she be now with a fresh engine? Quote
n1gzd_plymouth Posted February 6, 2020 Author Report Posted February 6, 2020 On 1/26/2020 at 9:43 PM, Andydodge said: Personally I would never use leather seals even if they have been soaking for a year in oil............although if there is a groove worn in the axle or whatever the seal rides on then it won't matter what the seals made of it will leak anyway, so a speedie sleeve or similar is required......I'd chase up a neoprene seal but thats just me........andyd we tried some modern seals and had no luck. will try again in the spring. I have not driven the car with the new engine. Got it done just about then the salt and snow arrived. snug as a bug now. I did just notice an oil leak under the firewall on the left side. I have not investigated but I am wondering if it is leaking line from oil filter hosing. will investigate soon. Rebecca Quote
n1gzd_plymouth Posted February 6, 2020 Author Report Posted February 6, 2020 1 hour ago, 55 Fargo said: Okay Miss Rebecca how she be now with a fresh engine? I did get a chance to go for a real drive. snow and salt arrived just about when we got it done. I can't wait. Also I can't wait to start working on my new one (the 39). Rebecca 1 Quote
n1gzd_plymouth Posted March 12, 2020 Author Report Posted March 12, 2020 other than repeated investigation I have been unable to figure out where this leak is coming from. I can see no oil above the cross member (on either side). Is dripping from the cross member (left side of car). Hopefully when I finally start it up for the spring I an see if it is a real leak (vs some oil that had pooled somewhere from before and is finally pouring out). Quote
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