Rear Pinion Seal
Rear Pinion Seal
I need to change the pinion seal and I was reading through my Haynes manual to get familiar. It says there is a washer of sorts that is crushed when you torque the nut down and needs to be changed every time the nut is loosened.
Anyone familiar with this and know of a source for this part?
Anyone familiar with this and know of a source for this part?
- manoa matt
- Posts: 3442
- Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2006 4:28 pm
- Your car is a: 1978 Fiat 124 Spider 1800
- Location: Honolulu, Hawaii
pinion seal
I'm also intestered, as my seal is leaking and oil is slung all over the underside of the car. It sucks that you need a masters in engineering to fool with the differential, just to install a $5 oil seal.
Would this work: ???
Use a torque wrench to find out what foot/pound the nut is tightened to, then remove it, remove the yoke, remove the seal, install a new seal, install the yoke, and then tighten the nut to the same torque, but no more.
In theory you wouldn't crush the washer any more with the same torque that it was originally tightened to.
I've also thought about just making an aluminum shield so the oil wouldn't fly all over, just hit the shield and then run off.
By the way, where will you find an inch/pound torque wrench?
Matt
Would this work: ???
Use a torque wrench to find out what foot/pound the nut is tightened to, then remove it, remove the yoke, remove the seal, install a new seal, install the yoke, and then tighten the nut to the same torque, but no more.
In theory you wouldn't crush the washer any more with the same torque that it was originally tightened to.
I've also thought about just making an aluminum shield so the oil wouldn't fly all over, just hit the shield and then run off.
By the way, where will you find an inch/pound torque wrench?
Matt
- manoa matt
- Posts: 3442
- Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2006 4:28 pm
- Your car is a: 1978 Fiat 124 Spider 1800
- Location: Honolulu, Hawaii
pinion seal
I was hoping someone would answer my other question about "would it work"
I think you only need the special inch/pound torque wrench if you went the complete route and changed the chush sleves.
Another way would be to make a mutual mark on the nut and the pinion and count the number of turns to get it off. Reasemble in reverse order, stop tightening when the marks line up. The oil seal shouldn't change any tolerances/clearances. (This is just me thinking out loud, I've never tried this with the differential pinion, It might NOT work)
I wish someone that has tried this (not just once, but several times) or someone who knows a thing or two about differentials would chime in.
Matt
I think you only need the special inch/pound torque wrench if you went the complete route and changed the chush sleves.
Another way would be to make a mutual mark on the nut and the pinion and count the number of turns to get it off. Reasemble in reverse order, stop tightening when the marks line up. The oil seal shouldn't change any tolerances/clearances. (This is just me thinking out loud, I've never tried this with the differential pinion, It might NOT work)
I wish someone that has tried this (not just once, but several times) or someone who knows a thing or two about differentials would chime in.
Matt
- manoa matt
- Posts: 3442
- Joined: Thu Oct 26, 2006 4:28 pm
- Your car is a: 1978 Fiat 124 Spider 1800
- Location: Honolulu, Hawaii
I guess I don't need to deal with it now, as it stoped leaking.
When I had the car up on stands I drained the diff and added new oil.
And there it sat for a few months slowly leaking.
Once I got it running right and took it for a few drives it stoped leaking. Either the seal just softened up from use, or some addatives in the oil did it. Either way I'm glad I don't have to fool with that for a while, still got the oil seal just in case.
Matt
When I had the car up on stands I drained the diff and added new oil.
And there it sat for a few months slowly leaking.
Once I got it running right and took it for a few drives it stoped leaking. Either the seal just softened up from use, or some addatives in the oil did it. Either way I'm glad I don't have to fool with that for a while, still got the oil seal just in case.
Matt