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Originally Posted by chicane
Uhm...gee. I dont know about that. Agree to disagree then. My fourty+ year old F-body was shipped from the factory with a -4* powertrain and a +4* pinion... creating the null that cancels the working angle and maintains the "equal and opposite" theory that you dispute.
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i never intended to dispute your theory for all applications, just for an example like his. lets just say for instance that in your example, your tranny pointed down towards the rear 4*, your drive shaft down towards the rear 3* and your rear pointed up 4*. your driveline would meet all the criteria since your working angles are as close to 1* as possible, and they differ by no more than .5*. you have the PERFECT setup.
but, if he points his pinion up, he is increasing his working angles. that point cannot be disputed.... period. therefore, by pointing it down, he is decreasing his angles and can still cancel them out, but with lower working angles.
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Originally Posted by Vegas69
The driveshaft can be level but you must have a working angle at both joints. (The driveshaft can't be on the same plane as the pinion or output shaft)
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that working angle can be the result of the pinion and output shaft on the tranny being on different horizontal planes. not suggesting it since it would be harder to measure, but i found it interesting while reading.
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Originally Posted by chicane
Just looking at that site and it's intripritation of any and all "one piece" prop shaft configurations basically it states that all of the OEM manufacturers for the last... uhmm I dont know, 60+ years... are wrong ??
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Transmission Angle Propshaft Angle Rear Pinion Angle
UP UP UP
UP UP DOWN
UP DOWN UP
UP DOWN DOWN
DOWN UP UP
DOWN UP DOWN
DOWN DOWN UP
DOWN DOWN DOWN
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you need to read what up and down refers to on that site. it threw me off at first as well. down on the tranny refers to the tranny actually pointing down towards the front. ive never see that in any oem application, therefore he is correct.
last quote i promise.....
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Failure to maintain matched and minimum operating angles increase erratic non-uniform output velocity from the drive shaft to the differential.
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matched would be the stated max of .5* difference, and minimum would be the 1* as stated. he states on the site that 4* is the max working angle you want for a shaft spinning like ours. but, i also talked to him on the phone and confirmed that 1* would not cause any issues and would lead to longer wear life on the joints. this echoed what spicer says.
with the OP having an angle of 3.5* on the tranny and the DS pointing up, he may be well out of the 4* spec, and hes way off the best case scenario of 1*.
Tim