Spacer my friend made me out of 6061 Aluminum on the lathe. I matched it to fit a bearing I found which fit the R150F input shaft.
Here's my final product with the ring gear/starter engagement issue that resulted from use of the spacer.
I used the flywheel holes to space the welds evenly to hold the extra ring gear. I called an industrial balancing place and described my project and they felt it was unnecessary to have rebalanced. There are two tacks, 4 1" welds, and 2 1/2"welds.
I posted pics of my welds because I would like some feedback. I think the first two were two "cold" but then I moved the current up one level and got better transition into the edges instead of being an abrupt edge. Also I think my wirespeed could go up a tad... What about the undercutting or whatever you call that when you cut into the base metal? That is from weld angle right?
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This last weld was where I noticed some cracking when cooling. My friend said it was due to the ring gear changing shape and size due to the heat of welding and pulling the bead apart while it cooled.
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Spacer dimensions. Hardest measurement was figuring out the depth of the bearing "holder" (the back wall). I've never worked with a pilot bearing before, (only bushings) or even seen a stock bearing setup. I set this up so that the bearing was a tight fit on the input shaft, and had some slip in the spacer. The bearing went on the input shaft then the tranny was installed. The "back wall" of the adapter was specd so that the bearing could not walk back on the input shaft and not be supported by the adapter. Not sure if that is how they work in a stock setup but it should be OK.
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Made some shackles by extending some Darlington offroad ones. I went this route because I didn't want to buy the 3/8 steel and an 18mm drillbit. The gusset is cut up 1x2 rect tube 1/8" wall drilled with a holesaw. Spacers are sprinlkler pipe. These shackles run into the frame so I can't crossbrace them-- we'll see if they hold up. Oh and yes the hardware is temporary.
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Butchered the starter nose cone to get it to fit the bell. I almost made it without cutting the bell but the gear hit when extended.
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I tried a number of solutions regarding the clutch slave cylinder. I found out the composition of brake fluid is just a glycol based compund with superior lubricant properties, non reactive, basic, and would work well in the air cylinder I had planned on using. The idea that it would eat the seals is a misconception. I did however decide against the air cylinder because the one I had bought had a very small shaft and I thought it might break. I also didn't want to deal with NPT fittings and making metric brake lines connect.
Another attempt was just an el cheapo approach by modifying the Isuzu slave cylinder. Cut off one tab, weld on another. You can see I was losing my patinece here and just stuck a piece of scrap on the end. I was really upset at that point because the filled in holes I was trying to redrill were making the drill bit wander, the welds were distorting the bore and the spatter was going into the cylinder making it useless. I also realized modifyng the cylinder is a bad idea incase I break one and have to find a replacement ASAP to get home.
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The Dodge cylinder was out of the question because it was plastic. An early Jeep cylinders might have worked as the pics on the advanced auto parts website looked like the correct mounting configuration.
I went with a cheap cylinder from a Toyota since it already had the metric fittings and it was cheap. It also had a smiliar bore size (13/16) as the Isuzu slave so I knew it would not overextend. I did have to build a bracket to hold it. This is just a "rough draft" of the bracket I stuck together. Now If I break one on the trail I can buy another one.
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I needed to run the isuzu shaft and extend it by welding in a section of a bolt. It also had the round head thing that I needed. I then ran the Isuzu slave boot.
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Putting the cab on last weekend I encountered a problem with the wheel studs. I pounded them out with a hammer some time ago and mashed up the threads bad since I knew I was going to replace them, but then forgot to replace them when I rebuilt the axle. I have to go back and do that but vise grips are handy if you need to roll the truck in a pinch:
This pic is for mike clark
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Doorway comealong method:
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The springs flattened out nice and the shackles are where I expected them to rest but the truck really is way too tall. that will have to be addressed eventually.
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I also have to admit I really messed up the measurements for the engine position. I thought the new engine would be a few inches back from the old yet I think it is mounted 6 inches forward!!!! This pic doesn't show it well but the throttle body is where the radiator normally is. I will go into more about that later for now I am in denial I made a measuring mistake.
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Drivetrain tucked way up.
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The pup is alive!!! (well it looks alive sort of) The body will some down about 3 inches as it is still sitting on the rear t-case and I want to lower the lift some also.
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