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entity-unknown wrote:The most important thing I did for all my diff setups, was take my old bearings and grind the mounting surface of the bearing or race, which ever one gets to be installed by a press/driver required to check setup. Basically use a Dremel to get close to slipping it on but not quite, then sandpaper smooth to finish so finally your "setup bearing" will slip on with just the perfect angle but be VERY difficult otherwise. You should spend no less than 30 minutes here with detailed/maximum effort. If it slips on at any angle, you ruined your setup bearing. If you do it right, you have setup bearings for life!
Don't pry your carrier out. Stuff the gears with a rag and turn the gears so it sucks the rag in. The diff will pop out every time
Once you got your setup bearings, then the rest is a breeze...![]()
The clamshell puller mentioned in the Jaguar video is needed if you want to keep your carrier and if you need those bearings for setups. eBay. Basically get it because even if you replace everything, you can't do the setup without it unless you have setup bearings because you will need to re-shim since the 1st time will never be good on a D44 since it has 4 points of adjustment vs. the 8.8 which has 3. DO NOT sacrifice time by using your old shims cuz the pattern "looks close" but DO use your old shims to start with your first PATTERN CHECK. Waste the time to set the pinion too close and too far and the carrier too far left/right so you can read the contact pattern.
Don't repaste your with new pattern grease each check. Just brush 4-6 teeth at 3 points. Just use the same brush maybe with a tiny dab of new grease to re-paint the old pattern. Run it thru 3-5 times before a recheck.
Now you know what you want in between because you researched a proper pattern. If it takes you 2 weeks, do it. You do NOT ever want to unbolt this thing again cuz you had to tear down the whole front end right?
You don't have the setup bearings unless you pull em proper from your old diff or you have a friend that has em. That HF bearing puller will not work this time even if it did at the rear. So, waste the money, it's worth it![]()
Have fun!
entity-unknown wrote:Yeah that's why I shared a couple resources cuz it took about 3 separate stories telling you 3 separate ways of doing things. From there I just took the bits here and there and came up with my own 4th process
Patience is key, strength only really comes involved with that pinion preload nut:\
Lookin forward to your results
Once you figure it all out, you can do minehobbyturnedobsession wrote:Ha first rooky mistake! When I ordered the bearing kit I opted for the kit with the seals and forgot to order a shim kit. Boy was I shocked when I saw that. Surprisingly AutoZone can get Yukon parts so I ordered the shim kit and I'll be moving forward Saturday. The case is clean inside and out, all seals, bearings and races are out and all seal material removed. Tomorrow I'll move over to the new carrier since I won't be able to install the pinion gear just yet.
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Oh yeah I can see that already. I picked up a small carbide bit more for sanding along with some grinding stones for my Dremel. I couldnt cough up 100.00 for the presome setup bearings. I'll keep them around for sure. I'll have to do the same for the 8?8 and Dana 60 in my 350 if they're the same.entity-unknown wrote:Even if you never do this again, you'll be so thankful you make setup bearings. You'll guard them so close, you won't even want to let your friends know you have them....