1995 4runner front diff question
#1
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Thread Starter
1995 4runner front diff question
How the H-E- double hockey sticks do you get the snap rings off the intermediate & side gear shafts to extract said shafts from the diff?
I can't SEE the snap rings so I'm guessing they are recessed into the spider gears?
I've pushed & pulled & wiggled & spun the carrier & the spider gears & both shafts thinking they might be visible if I held my mouth just right but I'm stumped.
The FSM says the snap rings are there & jumps right to pulling the shafts with SST's & doesn't mention how to remove the snap rings like it's either A: obvious as heck & I'm just missing it or B: the SST's pull the shafts with the snap rings intact - (not sure how the heck that would work without mangling something)
This is the stock ADD front diff w/ factory 4.88 gears btw
P.S. I thought for sure I could just hammer out the pin holding in the pinion shaft & badda-bing badda-boom; I'd have enough room to push the shafts in so I could see & then remove the snap rings holding the shafts in the spider gears....no such luck.
I can't SEE the snap rings so I'm guessing they are recessed into the spider gears?
I've pushed & pulled & wiggled & spun the carrier & the spider gears & both shafts thinking they might be visible if I held my mouth just right but I'm stumped.
The FSM says the snap rings are there & jumps right to pulling the shafts with SST's & doesn't mention how to remove the snap rings like it's either A: obvious as heck & I'm just missing it or B: the SST's pull the shafts with the snap rings intact - (not sure how the heck that would work without mangling something)
This is the stock ADD front diff w/ factory 4.88 gears btw
P.S. I thought for sure I could just hammer out the pin holding in the pinion shaft & badda-bing badda-boom; I'd have enough room to push the shafts in so I could see & then remove the snap rings holding the shafts in the spider gears....no such luck.
#2
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Thread Starter
Bumpity-bump
This is Yota-TECH after all. As many threads get answered about the best gear ratios & lockers to use....surely someone has pulled a Toyota front third member before. My experience is w/ Dodge & Chevy....they're easy. Push in the axle, remove the clip, pull out the axle.
This is Yota-TECH after all. As many threads get answered about the best gear ratios & lockers to use....surely someone has pulled a Toyota front third member before. My experience is w/ Dodge & Chevy....they're easy. Push in the axle, remove the clip, pull out the axle.
#3
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Thread Starter
Disregard this. I found the info I needed on Zuk's simple yet life saving site - http://www.gearinstalls.com/ifsinstall2.htm
Took all of 10 seconds to get them out once I knew they could be wedged out w/o damaging them.
Took all of 10 seconds to get them out once I knew they could be wedged out w/o damaging them.
#4
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Thread Starter
Trying to put the shafts back in the way the FSM says to do it shattered the c-clips; there was a Toyota tech in the parts lobby (when I was ordering new ones) who told me the "trick" to getting them back in; he said they break them all the time in the shop. We'll see tomorrow if his "trick" will work or not.
#5
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[rant] Well as is usual for any business these days Toyota only got me one of the two snap rings I ordered & four of the six bolts. They said it may be the middle of next week before they get it all together. I didn't really need the bolts but the snap ring is essential; so my truck is immobile because of a sixty-seven cent snap ring they couldn't send correctly (they got one right one & one wrong one sent, happens all the time when I order from them). [/rant]
On the tech side, the one snap ring I received went in easy this go 'round. The secret was putting on a heavy layer of grease to hold the snap ring centered as the shaft was inserted; that way it didn't droop down & get sheared off. I also learned that the NON-ADD equipped IFS diff gets a seal where the ADD equipped diff has to have the space open for the intermediate shaft to seat into. I just pried out the new seal & double checked it with a micrometer & it checked out. I was afraid I was gonna have to go to a salvage yard & search for a NON-ADD shaft for the drivers side....the NON-ADD shafts may be thicker & stronger but I like my shift on the fly.
On the tech side, the one snap ring I received went in easy this go 'round. The secret was putting on a heavy layer of grease to hold the snap ring centered as the shaft was inserted; that way it didn't droop down & get sheared off. I also learned that the NON-ADD equipped IFS diff gets a seal where the ADD equipped diff has to have the space open for the intermediate shaft to seat into. I just pried out the new seal & double checked it with a micrometer & it checked out. I was afraid I was gonna have to go to a salvage yard & search for a NON-ADD shaft for the drivers side....the NON-ADD shafts may be thicker & stronger but I like my shift on the fly.
#6
Registered User
Sorry no one could help, Brenjen. I certainly couldn't. I've never the done that job before.
Maybe you could explain the repair as you do it or when you're done so that there is a reference on YT from here on out??
Maybe you could explain the repair as you do it or when you're done so that there is a reference on YT from here on out??
#7
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Thread Starter
All I'm doing is installing new front & rear diffs w/ARB's built by Dirtoyboys builder up in Missouri named Victor of Victors offroad engineering. All the work has been easy so far except a couple minor snags I hit & those were because I'm not familiar with Toyota in general & what interchanges with what.
Like the rear diff I received didn't have a place for the ABS speed sensor to mount into. I have absolutely no information as to what diff they built & sent to me (as in year or 4 cly or 6 cly etc *shrug*) so I had to scramble around & figure out whether I needed to drill & tap or just unplug it from the truck & sell it. Since I don't tow & it apparently won't cause the complete loss of braking I just unplugged the unit. No ones fault, just an unforeseen snag.
The front diff, my-my-my......that was a dilly of a pickle for the same reasons really; unfamiliarity. Now that I have it out & with the snag of pulling the shafts hurdled & the snag of finding two seals in the sides of the new diff when the old one only had one hurdled & the snag of reinstalling the shafts hurdled; reinstalling it should just be the reverse of removing it; which was a piece of cake. Hell I'd be on the road right now if Toyota had gotten two of the correct snap rings when I ordered them instead of one right & one wrong.
Hopefully the pneumatics will plumb in easy & I won't have to search for the odd-ball fittings until I plumb in the CO2 system & manual switches sometime in the future.
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1995, 19954runner, 1996, 4runner, diferential, diff, differential, differentials, front, removal, remove, seal, shaft, shafts, shocks