Gene K.
Member
What is the correct alignment for the fluid feed hole in the bushing that goes into the transmission extension housing? This is for an FMX transmission. There are two slots in the extension housing. One near the top and one at the bottom. The old bushing was installed with the feed hole at the bottom. It makes more sense to me to put it at the top so the fluid feeds from the top and drains out the bottom. Of course if the hole is actually a drain hole, it belongs at the bottom. I can't find any reference to alignment in the shop manuals.
A few more notes and questions:
The C6 uses the same bushing, so if anyone has experience replacing one in a C6, that may help.
The transmission was rebuilt by a local shop less than 700 miles ago and was working fine. I started getting vibrations that would come and go at highway speeds and they got worse every time I drove it. The 8 inch rear end and possibly the drive shaft were replaced by the previous owner. (He took lots of "short cuts" with everything he did so I have had to fix many things. You can see one of them with the wire supporting the E-Brake cable to make it clear the exhaust in the photo. It is on my list of things to fix…) As it was working fine, I figured the balance on the driveshaft was okay. The U-joints all seem tight. However, the extension housing bushing felt too loose to me because I could move the yolk enough to get a small gap between it and the seal. Yes, it leaked even though it was a new seal. Looking at the length of the driveshaft (51" CL to CL on the U-joints), it appeared to me to be too short. The slip yolk was extended 2" from where it bottoms on the spline shaft and my theory is the extra leverage on the bushing caused it to fail. I have a 52" drive shaft on order from CJ Pony Parts which will give me about 1" of extension which from I have read is a more typical number.
Question: When replacing the driveshaft, I can have the slip yolk and drive shaft balanced as an assembly, but what about the pinion yolk? Should it be balanced with the rest of the assembly?
Thanks,
Gene K.
A few more notes and questions:
The C6 uses the same bushing, so if anyone has experience replacing one in a C6, that may help.
The transmission was rebuilt by a local shop less than 700 miles ago and was working fine. I started getting vibrations that would come and go at highway speeds and they got worse every time I drove it. The 8 inch rear end and possibly the drive shaft were replaced by the previous owner. (He took lots of "short cuts" with everything he did so I have had to fix many things. You can see one of them with the wire supporting the E-Brake cable to make it clear the exhaust in the photo. It is on my list of things to fix…) As it was working fine, I figured the balance on the driveshaft was okay. The U-joints all seem tight. However, the extension housing bushing felt too loose to me because I could move the yolk enough to get a small gap between it and the seal. Yes, it leaked even though it was a new seal. Looking at the length of the driveshaft (51" CL to CL on the U-joints), it appeared to me to be too short. The slip yolk was extended 2" from where it bottoms on the spline shaft and my theory is the extra leverage on the bushing caused it to fail. I have a 52" drive shaft on order from CJ Pony Parts which will give me about 1" of extension which from I have read is a more typical number.
Question: When replacing the driveshaft, I can have the slip yolk and drive shaft balanced as an assembly, but what about the pinion yolk? Should it be balanced with the rest of the assembly?
Thanks,
Gene K.
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