Again: Check your Knuckle-Nuts ;-)

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Yeah I've rented pullers enough that I've also started buying them. I think the last one I got was a pitman arm puller - probably need to rent this one again.
Haha I got them both the same way apparently other like them two as both were brand new quality tools.
I was surprised at the quality because it was AutoZone.
I was tried of beating on my sh*t with a hammer the way my dad showed me when I was a kid and we didn’t have the money to by nice tools.
He did teach me a lot 😍
 
Castle nut is reusable so long as you don't belt it out of shape trying to pop ball joints with hammers
You need to be a better aim then that 😂
 
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You need to be a better aim the that 😂
Its not the aim that's the problem, it's the red mist . . . :mad::bang:




:lol:

My first 80, changing tie rod ends was a multi-hour, multi-trip to the parts store excercise!
Used every trick in my book at that time, broke two tierod pullers, belted piss out of them with two 4lb hammers. Want until i got a pitman arm style puller that i managed to separate them!
 
Never been a issue for me 🤪
 
Job done. :) DS took 1/3rd the time of the PS. I was annoyed that I had to remove the knuckle, but it was much easier. I had to rent a smaller puller for that side - my Pitman puller was just a smidge too big, plus I'm not exactly sure of this, but it was on so tight, I think it flashed/sparked when it finally broke free. I topped off my steering ball grease, and boy, do I have a mess on the floor to work on tomorrow.

Again, sincere thanks to all who helped me through this job.
 
A bit of heat works wonders on tie rod joints.
 
Just wanted to add something to this that I think is important: after installation of the ARP studs, I shook it down on a dirt road, driving through all the washboards with tires at street pressure, hit some big moguls with the diff locked and the sway bar intact, and then checked torque. At least half the nuts required a retorque, which I did, and then I installed thread marker, as others have suggested in this thread. I'm happy to say that they haven't budged after pounding it on Red Cone and Radical Hill yesterday.
 
I remember someone was selling a stud that had eliminated the tapering into the threaded portions a few years ago. They came with 19mm nuts and cone washers. Used a torx socket to install the stud. Can't remember the name of the seller though.
 
I remember someone was selling a stud that had eliminated the tapering into the threaded portions a few years ago. They came with 19mm nuts and cone washers. Used a torx socket to install the stud. Can't remember the name of the seller though.
Landtank?

 
Yup that's it. I've been running those for a while now no problems.
It’s an OEM thread tension design problem. Instead of sticking your hands in your pants all the time it’s best to just eliminate the problem.

I did ARP years ago at proper torque and have never had to touch them except during rebuild.
 
I wonder if all of these loose nuts are done after a rebuild and never on a non-rebuilt front end. Not sure if I've ever heard it happening on an original front end.
That’s me in the original video. Original front end! Nut huggers after the rebuild. 163k miles. Wheeling it hard around Phoenix AZ for 10 years but Moab did it for me.
 
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I warned Joey that there was a potential for failure with his nut huggers.

The thread pitch on the knuckle is 1.5 while on the nut side it’s 1.25.

So if the stud loosened just the smallest bit it would then loosen totally as the stud will back out of the knuckle at a faster rate than it would screw into the captured nut.

There is a possibility of the stud falling out even though the nut was captured.
 

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