Hey all. Got a question to see what you guys think about this. I have a 1999 Freightliner FLD120. It was chopped down to 1 rear axle many moons ago from what I heard. It was chopped and turned into a mobile home toter truck. I dont have any specific measurements I can give right now if you wanted to know as it is at the shop right now. So I purchased the truck about 10 months ago. It was from a guy I run with. He pulled the 10 speed out and put an 18 speed in it. I will have to double check with him as he is not reachable for a couple weeks. But after he put the 18 speed in, I believe, he started blowing rear ends in it. 3 times with him. Then he said the guy he had it at figured it out. Did not have any issue for like 5 months. Then I purchased it from him and a month later the rear end went. Had a guy put one in, and then it went almost 4 months to the day and went again. That was this Tuesday. What do you guys think could be causing this? I have thought of the drive shaft is not balanced correctly or the pinion angle. The other owner said the guy shimmed the rear and that is what he thought solved the issue. But if he did, it did not solve the issue obviously. He also said that when he had the 18 speed put in, they custom made the drive shaft so I just assumed if they did, the guy would know how to balance it also. I cant say what happened when the other guy had it but with it going 2 times with me, I am wondering why I have no issues at all with the U joints but the rear is going. Any thoughts?
1999 FLD 120 Rear end keeps going
Discussion in 'Heavy Duty Diesel Truck Mechanics Forum' started by jeffl0123, Apr 25, 2024.
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gear ratio in rears not matching transmission, causing it to overheat, if you’ve changed everything else from driveline (which had to be swapped for 18) and make sure putting in synthetic gear oil, or it’ll get hot and burn them out.
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What rear is in it? What HP and What kinda weights are you pulling?
if it had standard 40,000lb rear and they removed the rear axle that one drive axle is taking a lot more torque rather than spreading it between 2 axles.
I'd want a 46k rear if I was running a single axle -
blairandgretchen, 201 and Crude Truckin' Thank this.
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Curious what the actual failures are? "Blown up" is nothing to go off of.Stay Puft, W923, Crude Truckin' and 1 other person Thank this. -
Feedman Thanks this.
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Wonder if the driveshaft slip yoke has about 2 1/2+ inches room before bottoming out?
Smellfunny, Stay Puft, Magoo1968 and 1 other person Thank this. -
AModelCat and BoxCarKidd Thank this.
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