DieselSpider wrote:One would think that it would have to be the inner race spinning to cause the failure shown in the picture if that was indeed the root cause. Are you certain that the ring and pinion are being set in the correct relationship to one another or that the axle shafts themselves are not askew?
Yes, this is the inner race.
How do you, OP, set the preload of the side bearings?
BTW I see you have a Russian 10/43 gear set
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
The fine gap between the main gears is one thing, but parallel to that the preload of the carrier is to be set.
I am sure you know that is measured by the "widening" of the two bearing housings by 0.16-0.20mm. If the bearing caps are too firm, the bearings can overheat and rollers "glue" to the race instead of rolling.
Original tool can report both values at the same time.
Low tech method is to use a caliper, preferably not a manual, as on the pic, but a digital one to zero it in position w unloaded bearing covers.
It is also too indefinite to use the raw cast surface for the caliper. I use the calipers only on the head of the temporarily fixed clamp screws (just the screws) Either with one corner or a flat edge pointing to the side. That gives repeatable readings and can be sure of the correct value at the end.
Also it is generally a good idea to have the one and two legged clamps in proper quantity (2-2 from each) so that you don't need to overtighten the bearing cap nuts just for the sake of being able to fix them.