OK… I’ve read this thread pretty intently and its got me pretty concerned. I got kicked over here from the pirate board because I’ve been considering an Orion as part of the powertrain in a Land Rover Series IIA/Defender 110 hybrid buildup that I’m doing. Cummins 4BT/NV4500 powerplant. Short of it being that I need a bulletproof low range T-case with an offset rear.
Dieselcruiserhead and Orangefj45 on the Pirate LC board said I should really ask around here to get an idea of how much of a problem these T-cases are having.
I’m a trained and decently experienced engineer and to me, the straight cut dog splines on these after market gearsets are 100% the problem, as cruiserbrett and treeroot have said. NO DOUBT ABOUT IT. Additional mods may help with a sketchy fix, but ultimately I think that the dog clutch design is flawed. Those gears should want to pull themselves together under load (thus the original factory undercut spline), but with straight splines they are free to walk themselves apart under load or any kind of deflection. Since gearsets operate with high viscosity lube and the teeth are not in theory meant to touch each other, but rather operate on a “cushion” of lube, the tendency for the dog collar and gear to separate from each other is only more exacerbated; without a positive retention force from beveled teeth, even the smallest axial force would tend to separate the two. Detent springs and other techniques with the shift fork may provide a sketchy fix, but in the end that fork was not designed to operate under continuous load, and the detent ball was only meant to secure the shift mechanism from flopping around, not provide the axial locating force for the shift collar. Keep in mind, I have NEVER actually seen one of these cases (or even a LC case) up close; I am just going off ample pictures and experience with transmissions and marine outdrives. Hell, the simplest proof is this – I don’t know about on toy cases, but on my scout dana 300, you CAN’T disengage 4H or 4L when the transfer case is under load… not even close. No amount of pulling on the shifter will get the thing to disengage. Its only when the truck has been driven straight for a bit, the front driveline unloaded, and the clutch disengaged and the truck stopped that you can shift the thing. Any time the T-case is loaded it “pulls itself into gear”, i.e. because of the beveled dog splines.
I’d LOVE to hear that someone has come up with a decent solution to this problem, or that AA is going to issue a suitable fix… but somehow I’m not optimistic. Anyone have any recent input? I really want one of these cases (it meets my needs), but I can’t bring myself to buy a case that is going to chronically (if not dangerously) skip out of gear. There could be serious wear issues too with the dog splines… if the gears keep spitting themselves apart under load, the tendency would be for the splines to wear a positive taper towards the open ends of the splines, making them even MORE prone over time to walk apart.
Bummer. I was really hoping this case would be bombproof. Does anyone know the stats on what % of people are actually experiencing this problem?