Moving at a downright glacial pace on this lately. I unfortunately got sick not long after the last post and didn't work on much for almost two weeks. I got the hubs cleaned up, repainted and reassembled with the upgraded chromoly splines while I was sitting around sick.
Over the last week I tore down the front diff and got it all cleaned up and the housing painted and drilled and tapped for the ARB bulkhead fitting. Started setting up the new gears yesterday. Assembled the ring gear on the ARB and pressed in the carrier bearings; everything was going smoothly until I started on the pinion. Unfortunately I learned the hard way today that there are two different size pinions for the Toyota 8" and the bearings need to be matched correctly to make them work interchangeably. The ring and pinon sets that I have are the later style "long pinion head" version (1986-1995), the ones that are coming out of my truck are the earlier "short pinion head" version (1979-1985). In order to install the later pinion in an early 4-cylinder housing I'll need to get the shorter inner pinion bearings that would be for an 1986-1995 4-cylinder housing and unfortunately the setup kits I ordered a while back came with the same size bearings that were stock in my truck. As a result, my pinion depth with the original size bearing and the later style "long" pinion is over a half inch too deep right now.
Part numbers I'll need to order (both are the same bearing):
KOYO TR070803C-N |
NACHI 35KC802 |
Here are some links with some useful information that helped me figure out what was going on.
www.pirate4x4.com
toyota differential bearing listing
www.gearinstalls.com
Old and new pinions for comparison. "short" style on the left, "long" style on the right.
An old spindle from my 60 is the perfect size tube to press on pinion bearings
This bearing puller from amazon would have worked great for removing the pinion bearing without damaging it, but unfortunately none of the three cups are small enough to get under the bearing shell. If you are doing an 8", save your money and just get a cheap bearing splitter from harbor freight.