roaniecowpony
Well-Known Member
There's always some good amount of backlash in the spider gears, because you are dealing with 4 separate gears. They should rotate smoothly with perceptable feel (when turning the axle flange by hand without the wheels on) of teeth meshing because they are straight cut bevel gears.M
Buying a bronco carrier would require rechecking backlash and pinion depth anyways right? At that point might as well get something like an OX locker unless I am wrong. I ordered the sensor kit if that doesn't fix my locker I might give that actuator hack a try only if I am 100% sure that there is no mechanical issues with my differential.
It was working before dropping it off at the shop so they either installed something wrong or my sensor got oil and metal particles on it causing it to malfunction. I did check for noise on the gears and the two gears I can see look good as new (video). When rotating the tire they sound good. But halfway through the video if I rotate the tires back and forth quickly I hear like a clunky noise. I am not sure if that's normal or not. Thanks.
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On the lockers, you have some big choices to make.
All the aftermarket locker diff carriers, that I'm aware of for the Rubicon axle housings (OX, Eaton, ARB) require changing from the OEM 32 spline axles to larger 35 spline axles. Read their literature carefully and you can call OX and they'll help. So, you spend $1200-1500 on the locker diff carrier, then whatever 35 spline axles go for, which IIRC was $1k + as well.
If you decide to keep the OE size locker diff carrier, and need a replacement, again, Jeep doesn't sell the diff carrier below the axle assembly. The Bronco carrier I showed (Dana-Spicer 10039946) is a direct replacement. Same part. I have one right next to me as I type this. It runs from about $460 to 700 depending on where you get it.
If your locker actuator (solenoid coil) is bad and you need a replacement, Jeep doesn't offer this part for sale at any assembly level below the entire axle assembly, flange to flange. You either have to find a used one or retrofit in something else. I found that the Bronco Raptor (and other high trims) used the M220 Advantek in slightly different configurations, and the Bronco actuator coil worked when my locker actuator died and I was already heavily invested in my 32 spline chromoly axles. You simply need to change the connector to match the JL and add a Z-Automotive JL Sensor jumper. If you want to look into this route further, I can provide more detail to help you through this route. It's really pretty simple, but finding the connector was a easter egg hunt. Fortunately for you, I have a lot of them.
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