Twisted Front Driveshaft

Jesse B.

Member
I tried asking this question on bb and got one (mildly helpful)response, so I thought I would try it here. I have a 1975 Scout II with a stock 304 and rebuilt 727. Dana 20 transfer case. 3.54 gears and 32x11.50 tires. It has a rancho 2.5 lift, which is acutally closer to a 4 inch lift. I just completed a reverse shackle (IHOnly) and had to have the stock front driveshaft lengthened. The tube diameter of the stock shaft was 1.25". I got the driveshaft back several weeks ago and they used 1.25 tube with .120 wall. I took the truck out a couple weeks ago for its first 4wd test. Once I got on a good trail I locked the hubs, put in it 4-lo and promptly climbed up a fairly steep dirt motorcycle trail. No jumping, no bouncing. Once I got back off the trail and satisifed that everything worked, I popped it out of 4-lo into 2wd, but left the hubs locked in. At about 20mph, I got a vibration and loud rattle. I crawled underneath and did not notice anything immediately wrong, I was in a hurry, so I just unlocked the hubs and figured I would take a closer look later. I finally got a chance to crawl under and really take a good look and noticed that when I spun the front driveshaft by hand it wobbled about 1/2 inch up and down. All the paint at each weld was also missing and you could see the stress twist in the metal. When I took the driveshaft off, it was about 1/4 turn out of phase (from the twisting). Now the question is, has anyone had this problem? If so, what did you do to correct it? I can't believe it was anything I did, or didn't do, because if that driveshaft twisted with what little I put it through, I don't know how it could stand up to trail use. I know 1.25 was stock, and many people are using them that size, but I don't know what could have caused the twist.

I've looked through the web and some people say I should not go with a larger tube because it May hit my automatic pan. What about a heavier wall, say .188? Does anyone know if the stock shaft was .188 wall to begin with and I got ripped when they put in .120? How much stronger will .188 wall be than .120? Thanks in advance, Jesse
 
Jeff is out of town, so that the reason no responses.

Going by memory as I lost a lot of pictures from a hard drive failure. I thought the upper end of a stock front drive shaft was solid or almost solid. I believe there was a change from the early years to the later years too. ( I'm sure I wil stand corrected):sosp:

anyway you need to stay with the stock 1310 joint as a 1350 or 1310 cv will hit the 727 pan, even with grinding you May still have issues.
Stick with a small dia drive shaft. Under 2" I took my stock shaft and cut off both ends and made a sq drive shaft. ( low tech) but I need something right away and I have other drive train changes on the way.
I used 1.5"x.188 for the upper tube and 2 x .250 for the lower tube. Anti seeize for lube
plus with all my lift I used a Tom wood super flex joint at the t-case and one of Jeff's u-bolt yokes at the pumpkin as they are a 1/4" longer allowing the shaft to turn and the drive shaft yoke now does not hit the pinion yoke nut when fully drooped.
 
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Fyi

this weekend I pulled a front driveshaft out of a Scout that was parting out, took the shaft home, cut it in half, and measured the wall. Stock Scout front driveshafts are 1.25" in diameter and have a 3/16 (.188) thick wall.
 
I have my profile setup correctly, but never get e-mails on post.
I would ask for the shop to fix it, if you paid good money to have it done. What did they think you had a samurai:icon_eek:
 
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