Ok Chris. I will send you a seized VC--I'll even pay for the shipping.
Put it in your rig and see how far down the road you get.
Report back.
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Dude,
Chris doesn't get far down the road when everything is WORKING on his truck.
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Ok Chris. I will send you a seized VC--I'll even pay for the shipping.
Put it in your rig and see how far down the road you get.
Report back.
![]()
Black as in wasn't changed recently, but was still gear oil and the correct ammount
Newbie as I didn't know what a seized VC was when I bought it.
Gear whine caused by the VC. I ended up needing a new carrier too.
Now it's 100% with a gear change and new VC
Draw your own conclustion but with the change everything works as it should.
...
Pavement is one of the highest forms of traction short of getting a tire wedged in a rock, so I can possibly see breaking parts in a tight turn. When you're off road, in dirt, gravel, or whatever, the tires have a lot more give to slip, even if the center diff locked.
However, that said, the gear whine does lead me to wonder if there was other major issues going on with the diff and I do wonder if the locked up VSC was more of an aggravator rather than the root cause of the failure.
.
Useless post. FAIL!Dude,
Chris doesn't get far down the road when everything is WORKING on his truck.
If you have ever wheeled in a place like Moab, the slick rock has very high traction, my guess higher than pavement.
I have many times and seen plenty of others spin all 4 tires, fully locked on slick rock.
Spinning all four tires while fully locked would indicate low traction, not high. Plus the name itself (slick rock) would indicate the same.
That'd be the opposite of pavement. Pavement is where the tire has enough traction that it can't/won't spin, causing drive train windup and increasing the chance of breaking something if locked. Slick rock allowing tires to spin easily would eliminate drive train windup, meaning very little chance of breaking something (at least due to that particular cause).
You have obviously never been to Moab. The name "slick rock" was given a long time ago, for steel covered wagon wheels and steel horse shoes it was reported to be slick. It's solid sandstone, where/when it's clean it has fantastic traction for rubber tires, similar to course sandpaper. Yes rigs get very bound up, turning sharp and/or blipping the throttle causes tire(s) to slip/spin temporally releasing the bind. This is accompanied by loud tire barks, this is referred to as Moab seals barking.
If you have never experienced it, at least watch some Moab videos, when there are a lot of rigs working on slick rock obstacles there will be almost constant barking. I test my lockers before most every trip in the parking lot and find it much easier to bark the tires on pavement than Moab slick rock.
The oil coming out was dark but the consistency was that of oil and not moly grease. I pulled the fill plug first and very little oil came out so it was the right ammount. It could have been origional oil didn't have records of maintenance. I didn't get to see the carrier my buddy(Toyota Tech) who did the swap took the core in and swaped for another good one. He said it was bad, that's all I know about the carrier. I have a box full of bearings and gaskets and such from the swap and knucle rebuild.
Even assuming all that is true, I've never spun 4 tires on pavement.
Nor do I think anyone is doing 65 mph on slick rock.
Even if slick rock is far grippier than pavement, it's still an apples to oranges comparison. It'd be like saying "I've never rolled my Cruiser by cranking the wheel over as hard as I can....at 5 MPH."
Yeah I saw that. It looks like it got super hot due to poor oil visc. Basically caramelizing the oil and whatever else was in the oil to it.I'm not sure why it hasn't been mentioned but what's the nasty grease goo and rust on the pinion gear and pinion shaft?
I'm not sure why it hasn't been mentioned but what's the nasty grease goo and rust on the pinion gear and pinion shaft?
I realize a seized V would put you in a constant state of 4WD but it wasn't that long ago many trucks were sold new with full time 4WD and those trucks didn't have major drama. I agree with Kevin, there was something else going on and the seized VC was the icing on the cake to cause breakage.
Even assuming all that is true, I've never spun 4 tires on pavement. ...
If you going to wheel even moderately aggressively on rock, it happens. The first video is of a step on Zuki Hill, it is a long complex of climbs/obstacles. With a big group there is often rigs working many obstacles at once, so a din of seals barking. The video makes it look flat, the pic does a better job of showing the climb that the ledge is on, where the yellow FJC is.
The second video is some obstacles with seals barking. Often, once an obstacle is cleared there is nothing but an expanse of slick rock, so to unlock you have to rock the steering wheel, blip the throttle, bark the tires to relieve the bind. This becomes second nature, when you have done this, the whole "never lock on high traction surfaces or you will break something" argument becomes.