grimmjeeper
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Roy
- Joined
- May 6, 2021
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- Castle Rock, CO
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- www.grimmjeeper.com
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- 2021 Wrangler, 1987 Comanche, 1997 F250
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- enginerd
Sure, tooth count changes. But that doesn't always mean more teeth. The number of teeth on the ring stays within a small range. As the pinion diameter goes down, you get fewer teeth. But without getting significantly bigger or smaller teeth.@nvgearhead, not to give you something else to consider, but here's something else to consider: a numerically higher gear ratio means more teeth. Those teeth are going to be thinner to be able to fit. Thinner typically means weaker.
Not that anyone ever has diff issues, but my rig is currently in the shop dealing with diff issues.
For example, a 4.10 gear set (41/10) and a 3.73 (41/11) have the same number of teeth on the ring gear. They're roughly the same size because the ring gear doesn't change diameter. The 4.10 pinion has 10 teeth. The 3.73 pinion has 11. But since the 3.73 pinion head is roughly 10% bigger in diameter, the pinion teeth are roughly the same size.
Same thing applies between the 4.30 gears (43/10) I took out of my dana 80 in favor of the 5.38s (43/8).
But even when you factor in more teeth, you also start to see more teeth in contact at any given point in time. And that makes up for the teeth being weaker.
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