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| North American Grand Cherokee Association | ||
| Your one stop source for Jeep Grand Cherokee Information | ||
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Myths Regarding Diffs |
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By Randy Lyman |
Over the years I have heard a lot of myths
regarding the setup and design of differentials.
One of the biggest myths is; Who is really qualified to setup a ring & pinion? I
have heard time and time again that the following situations make a person a
qualified differential expert. They: are an old timer; have a race car; are in a
four wheel drive club; are a machinist; or have built a few rearends for their
buddies. If people in these situations really know what to do maybe we should
look for an old machinist, in a four wheel drive club, who owns a race car.
Would this situation make them a complete authority? I don't think so. I believe
there are only a few people who really know how to setup a rearend correctly and
they have learned from years of experience and collecting facts.

The gear ratio in the front of a four
wheel drive has to be different from the front so the front wheels will pull
more? There have been many different ratio combinations used in four wheel drive
vehicles, but not so that the front will pull more. Gear manufactures use
different ratios for many different reasons. Some of those reasons are;
strength, gear life, noise (or lack of it), geometric constraints, or simply
because of the tooling they have available. I have seen Ford use a 3.50 ratio in
the rear with a 3.54 in the front, or a 4.11 in the rear with a 4.09 in the
front. As long as the front and rear ratios are within 1%, the vehicle works
just fine on the road, and can even be as different as 2% for off-road use with
no side effects.
1 point difference in ratio is equal to 1%. To find the percentage difference in
ratios it is necessary to divide, not subtract. In order to find the difference,
divide one ratio by the other and look at the numbers to the right of the
decimal point to see how far they vary from 1.00. For example: 3.54 ÷ 3.50 =
1.01, or 1%, not 4% different. And likewise 4.11 ÷ 4.09 = 1.005, or only a 1/2%
difference. These differences are about the same as a 1/3" variation in front to
rear tire height, which probably happens more often than we realize.
A difference in the ratio will damage the transfer case. Any extreme difference
in front and rear ratios or front and rear tire height will put undue force on
the drive train. However, any difference will put strain on all parts of the
drivetrain. The forces generated from the difference have to travel through the
axle assemblies and the driveshafts to get to the transfer case. These excessive
forces can just as easily break a front u-joint or rear spider gear as well as
parts in the transfer case.
Positraction is better than limited slip. I have heard many people call a
standard open differential a "limited slip" and I have been asked for a limited
slip instead of a positraction because they wanted something that was not too
aggressive. From my experience positraction and limited slip are just two
different names for the same thing. If anyone can find a SAE standard or printed
definition please let me know and I will gladly correct myself.
Thanks Randy for sharing this information with NAGCA
Send comments to grandtech@nagca.com
North American Grand Cherokee Association
www.nagca.com
Copyright © 2006 by NAGCA All rights reserved.