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Rear axle disassembly


Go to solution Solved by kencombs,

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Posted (edited)

I have a 47 Dodge 1/2 ton WC.  On a modern differential you pull the cover plate, un-bolt and pull a pin and remove a u clip in order to pull the axle out.  In the 47 there is no cover plate.  You need to remove the drive shaft and and pull the entire gear assembly out the front to work on it.  How do you pull the axle out in order to remove the gear assembly?  Does the brake backing plate hold the axle in?

RunningGearRemoval.jpg

RunningGearRemoval2.jpg

Edited by dgrinnan
Posted
1 minute ago, dgrinnan said:

I have a 47 Dodge 1/2 ton WC.  On a modern differential you pull the cover plate, un-bolt and pull a pin and remove a u clip in order to pull the axle out.  In the 47 there is no cover plate.  You need to drove the drive shaft and and pull the entire gear assembly out the front to work on it.  How do you pull the axle out in order to remove the gear assembly?  Does the brake backing plate hold the axle in?

RunningGearRemoval.jpg

RunningGearRemoval2.jpg

Simple answer yes the axles are held in by the backing plates

  • Solution
Posted

These and the famous Ford 8 and 9 inch are much superior, IMHO, to the 'modern' ones.  At least from a mechanics perspective as adjusting bearings is a snap compared to case spreaders and shims on the 'modern' versions.  Also, setting up gear depth and backlash is a bench job, not an under the car process.   I knew a lot of guys back in the day that had a weekend center section and a weekday version.   4.11s or 4.56s at the strip and 3.08 or 3.23 for the highway.   Most could swap in 30-40 minutes.

 

More common repair for me was axle bearings.  No draining lube to pull the axles.  4 bolts, pop it out, press bearing done. 

 

 

 

 

  • 3 weeks later...

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