Rear Lockout Hubs???
#1
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Rear Lockout Hubs???
Has anyone ever had lockout hubs on thier rear axle??
If so... what all has to be changed???? Anyone have a write up??? Any pics??? Part requirements???
thanks
If so... what all has to be changed???? Anyone have a write up??? Any pics??? Part requirements???
thanks
#2
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i'm not quite sure thats possible, and why would you want to. If the rears unlocked you wouldn't go anywhere unless you put in in 4 and drove around with front wheel drive.
#4
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Originally Posted by surelly09
exactly my point... if i want to tow my truck i don't want to be able to unlock the rear...
#7
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http://www.frontrangeoffroadfab.com/floater.htm
There you go.
There you go.
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#8
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Have patience, and I'll have pics and some write up info on the FrontRange Full Floater kit on my website. I just ordered thier Full Floater with the Supra rear disc brakes.
I should have them on in a couple weeks....
However, I have opted to use FROR's flange, instead of a manual hub. I have a manual hub as a spare, but the flange they have as an option is stronger.
regardless, I'll have info on this setup pretty soon.
I should have them on in a couple weeks....
However, I have opted to use FROR's flange, instead of a manual hub. I have a manual hub as a spare, but the flange they have as an option is stronger.
regardless, I'll have info on this setup pretty soon.
#11
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Yeah, its pretty pricey. That price doesn't even include the calipers, bearings, gaskets, spindles, hubs. I'll have a price sheet when i get mine done.
BUT, this is a small price to pay so your wheel doesn't fall off. When I pulled my drum and shaft off, I was surprised to see how much play had developed in the bearings. I have 68k miles on the 4Runner, and the wheels looked like there were about to fall off.
Being that I load up my rig pretty heavy, I would rather pay now, and have peace of mind, than pay later when my wheel passes me on the highway because the bearing failed and let loose of the drum and wheel.
BUT, this is a small price to pay so your wheel doesn't fall off. When I pulled my drum and shaft off, I was surprised to see how much play had developed in the bearings. I have 68k miles on the 4Runner, and the wheels looked like there were about to fall off.
Being that I load up my rig pretty heavy, I would rather pay now, and have peace of mind, than pay later when my wheel passes me on the highway because the bearing failed and let loose of the drum and wheel.
#12
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how do you test the play in the bearing? take the drum off the housing and see if it moves? when i replaced my axle seal, i didn't recall any play around the drum or axle shaft. I suppose it takes a bit of abuse to damage it?
#13
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I first noticed that I had play in the bearing as I was following my wife home. She was driving the 4Runner home from some event, and I noticed that the left rear wheel appeared to be wobbeling, not too much, but enough to notice.
Later when I pulled the drum and shaft off, It was very evident that the bearing was loose. I put the drum down on the floor with the shaft sticking up in the air. In this position, I could move the drum up and down while the shaft stayed still.
This translates into a bearing that is on its last bearing with others in hot pursuit. If you think about it, this stuff is all pressed together. When you are on the trail, and you have several thousand pounds of side-loading on the bearings, they are going to loosen up. I have weighed my rig in the past, and I have tipped the scales at 5200lbs. Thats a lot of weight that the "pressed" on parts are having to support. The type of rock crawling that we generally do puts a serious load on the tires, bearings and pressed in parts. Brain and FROR has seen these units fail. Since I'm trying to build a hybrid (expedition/rockcrawling) rig, I want to ensure that I have redundancy built in. Should an axle break, I can pull the alxe, and still drive home on the good axle, or the front axles. I may be going slow, but I'll get home.
Later when I pulled the drum and shaft off, It was very evident that the bearing was loose. I put the drum down on the floor with the shaft sticking up in the air. In this position, I could move the drum up and down while the shaft stayed still.
This translates into a bearing that is on its last bearing with others in hot pursuit. If you think about it, this stuff is all pressed together. When you are on the trail, and you have several thousand pounds of side-loading on the bearings, they are going to loosen up. I have weighed my rig in the past, and I have tipped the scales at 5200lbs. Thats a lot of weight that the "pressed" on parts are having to support. The type of rock crawling that we generally do puts a serious load on the tires, bearings and pressed in parts. Brain and FROR has seen these units fail. Since I'm trying to build a hybrid (expedition/rockcrawling) rig, I want to ensure that I have redundancy built in. Should an axle break, I can pull the alxe, and still drive home on the good axle, or the front axles. I may be going slow, but I'll get home.
Last edited by SteveO; 09-19-2005 at 08:06 AM.
#14
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The other good thing about hubs on all 4 is certain muddy sidehill applications. Unlock the "downhill" side and this will keep the downhill side from pulling you downhill. it sounds crazy but it works!
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Originally Posted by Jared Ajlouny
only if you have a locker....
not necessarily true. Torque is supplied to the wheel with the least amount of traction. If the wheel on the bottom side of the slope had more traction then the top side, then that wheel would get the torque.
With the locker engage, and the rear hub unlocked that the wheel on the bottom side of the slope, torque will go to the top side wheel, keeping your line a little more straight.
If no locker was available, a turning break would work pretty nice....
#18
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I really like the idea of what the full floater does.....looks like it may be years until I get to htat point tho....unlelss i break something, breaking stuff usually results in me splurging on a mod that I would have otherwise waited to do.