Roky
Well-Known Member
They come in blue too…..Damn, for some reason I thought the Dana covers only fit the U44 axles. They look nice.
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They come in blue too…..Damn, for some reason I thought the Dana covers only fit the U44 axles. They look nice.
I think the pro of having a drain plug is if you need to change your gear oil on the trail from water intrusion. It would be a lot easier to pull one plug than the entire cover, and that would keep you running until you can pull the cover and inspect everything for a proper change.Plenty of reasons to change the factory diff covers. The addition of a drain plug shouldn’t be one of them. Any nasty bits in the housing will settle at the lowest point. The lowest point will never be on a diff cover. The cover should come off during routine fluid changes to inspect for wear and/or damage.
I know! I’ve looked at them before and like an idiot thought “I wish those fit the stock axles”. Now that I have metalcloak stuff all over the front end, the blue cover might look out of place.They come in blue too…..
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I also went Motobilt, with Rancho Diff diapers.Locker solenoid Guard and rear diff skid finally installed.
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Pic of the front Diff skid clearance.
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Skid clearances
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Pretty sure if you fill to your new fill point you will have too much oil in there. The allen plug is the fill point. Add oil until it comes out of that hole. These need to be removed to drain the old oil.![]()
These are a motobilt kit. Tig welded and powder coated red (of course). I added a fill point in the upper corner using Jeep JL oil pan plugs. The grill logo is a stainless steel keychain that tack welded on then sanded
Me tooI kept it in house….. went with Dana.. and a Rancho skid, that I color matched……
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Technically yes, you are correct- but some of the early JL's had drain plugs in the bottom of the pumpkin/ housing- so you could technically do a fluid change without removing the cover. Mine has that and that's basically how I drained it before swapping covers.Pretty sure if you fill to your new fill point you will have too much oil in there. The allen plug is the fill point. Add oil until it comes out of that hole. These need to be removed to drain the old oil.
Or am I wrong?
I know how to put oil in the diff. Yes the big plug comes out. I fill from the other side because I find it easier. Thank you for your concern.Pretty sure if you fill to your new fill point you will have too much oil in there. The allen plug is the fill point. Add oil until it comes out of that hole. These need to be removed to drain the old oil.
Or am I wrong?
You don't need to pull the cover when you do regular fluid changes. Pull the drain plug and check what the magnet has on it. If it's normal, you put the plug back in and fill the diff. You only need to pull the cover if there's evidence of damage.I think the pro of having a drain plug is if you need to change your gear oil on the trail from water intrusion. It would be a lot easier to pull one plug than the entire cover, and that would keep you running until you can pull the cover and inspect everything for a proper change.
That said, it's the only reason I can think of to have a plug vs. not having a plug.
Yes, but depending where the drain plug is, metal shavings, oil, and whatever else may not flow out completely through the hole. Most likely a non issue for the vast majority of owners.You don't need to pull the cover when you do regular fluid changes. Pull the drain plug and check what the magnet has on it. If it's normal, you put the plug back in and fill the diff. You only need to pull the cover if there's evidence of damage.
Granted, a whole lot of people never bother to do regular maintenance on their diffs. So for them a drain plug wouldn't be used.
I have a 2021 so I have a drain plug in the housing. I have a diff skid to keep it from being damaged on the rocks. I'd rather have a diff with no drain in the housing but one in the cover to get that extra inch of clearance back.