Actually I'm doing the same in two projects. My 60 and a stretch 40. That's why I resurrected the
axle project
axle project
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So Cam,
I guess if you went this way and wanted to stay about the same width you could use a 40 housing eh?
feel free to swipe steven's from my yard...![]()
What if I don't want the fatigue life problem or need the strength of 'chro-mo', but need FF shafts in a custom length?
Any of the 4XXX series steels has a much higher strength than does any of the 1XXX steels, but with that comes a shorter relative fatigue life. As the heat treat is ramped up to increase the yield strength, the fatigue life is proportionately reduced. An estimate of the fatigue life of the 4XXX series can be calculated if the stresses are known and reasonably repetitive, but for "mild" steels it is not normally done. Kept within their yield strength and assuming no unusual service conditions, fatigue life for mild steel is normally just accepted to be 1 million cycles. As the strength of the steel used increases fatigue life calcs become more important. If the stresses involved are considerably below the Fatigue Strength of the alloy then service life should be fine. Not knowing what those stresses are and what the Fatigue Strength of the alloy is, I'm left with taking the conservative route. Which is to prefer an OE comparable alloy over a shaft made from "chro-Mo".
Reversing torsional stress, as an axle shaft sees, is the worst kind of fatigue. Most guys here are spinning much larger tires than I am. That additional strength is needed and the fatigue life is not as much of a concern. On 33's the additional strength doesn't buy me anything, but if the fatigue life isn't at least equal to OE then I'd rather have an alloy comparable to the OE alloy.
Then buy our shafts
Not sure which "problems" you are referring to, but not with ours.
Then buy our shafts
I would like to see pricing on these, as well as some dimensional drawings with overall lengths & spline lengths of each axle.
Usually the "Chro-Mo" used for axle shafts and half-shafts is 4340(M) or if truly serious, 300M. I've only recently heard of 17-4 being used in this application. I'd be interested to know what HT is called out for this.'Any of the 4XXX series steels has a much higher strength than does any of the 1XXX steels, but with that comes a shorter relative fatigue life. As the heat treat is ramped up to increase the yield strength,...'
ah, sure, but 41xx can be annealed back to quite soft, or normalized
to reduce the brittleness... problem is, it's quite sensitive to both
processes, and the trade offs are pretty significant (ductility and stress and notch resistance
versus ultimate tensile strength) So if it's not done right, the axles won't last at all
(and I wonder if that's whats going on with the Poly axles...)
While I'm here, there are lots of steels that have both chromium and molybdenum
alloyed into them- while 'chromoly' usually means 4130, it doesn't have to, at all...
Cool thread- and thanks again, Tor, for that full- floater!!!!
t
Then buy our shafts
I would like to see pricing on these, as well as some dimensional drawings with overall lengths & spline lengths of each axle.
I found prices on their website, but no dimensional drawings.
Usually the "Chro-Mo" used for axle shafts and half-shafts is 4340(M) or if truly serious, 300M. I've only recently heard of 17-4 being used in this application. I'd be interested to know what HT is called out for this.
EDIT: Thinking about this further, my relatively low stress level means that the fatigue cycles in the shafts will be lower and thus there could be many more of them. So a high strength axle shaft would only be detrimental to my bank account.
I worked with a class 8 team in the late eighties where we ran a 17-4 axle set. I believe we went with the heat treater's recommendations. A 40~45 rockwell .
They held up quite well. he claimed the he could treat the shafts so the surface would maintain a 40+ rockwell while the center would be a softer 30~35 rockwell. They were a double spline with a drive flange. The splines on the drive flange end were interference fit with the very end slightly larger than the area where the flange would locate. The flange would have to be heated while the axle frozen. The fit was quite permanent once pressed together
If the drive flange pattern is the same between 80 FF and 62FF could take an 80FF (housing), narrow it.... add 60 axle shafts and my expensive built 60 third. Then I'd have a FF with disks and a parking brake.
the only issue that I'm seen with the swap ( been thinking in that for a while ) it's the wheel bolt pathern .. coz I don't know any 14B FF 6 bolts ..
plus the 14bolt third member is a really tight squeeze in the cruiser housing. I'm
guessing you'd be shaving the ring gear
The hubs can be turned down and made into a 6 lug pattern. as was done here. https://forum.ih8mud.com/60-series-wagons/221512-freds40-builds-60-a-30.html#post4609064
I'm talking swap the entire axle, not just the carrier. Im loving the hell out of mine so far. just yesterday I pulled a truck with enough force that I am sure it would have broken a stocker, even bounced it a little and didnt even care!![]()