On Thu, 21 Sep 2006, J Johnson wrote: > I received the following inquiry from a guy on another message baord I > frequent. I have never been into a torque tube, figured someone here > has. I would like to know more about this as well.... Thanks for the forward; tell 'em to join this list, all the torque-tube weirdos are here! There is no "rear U joint", v8 or six. There is either a single U-joint (six) or a CV joint (v8), and only at the front, with a fairly typical-looking front yoke. > (transmission engages but car will not move, slight squeek sound can be > heard back there, was told by previous owner that it's the u-joint) . I With no data, I'd guess it was an axple problem, not a driveshaft/ rear end problem. Spun at the hub? Jack the car, one wheel at a time, put in park, rotate wheel, see if you can get more symptoms to diagnose with. I assumed it was a freak, but my 63 classic's pinion shaft sheared off when pulling away from a stop light, in 1996. Crack the throttle, revs up like in neutral, and >clink clank clunk< from the rear as the driveshaft wobbled around in the torque tube. Cost me $1000 to repair (new ring, pinion, bearings, and labor) in 1996. The old part where it broke looked like a thumbnail; a small half-moon of shiny metal, and the rest greyish, like a very old, creeping fracture; slow oxidation turned the metal gray. if I recall it was about 25% connected! It took 33 for the part to fail! I hope his problem isn't that; if it is, find a donor rear! If it is that, it would be disturbing that two failed in the same way. There's not much else back there to fail! The driveshaft has a simple splined couple (six) or some sort of weighted balance splined coupler (v8). It's passive, no moving parts. I suppose anything can break, but some things seem most unlikely. I also had an axle shaft spontaneously break on a 1959 American. This was about 1977. It broke in the middle! The 196 flathead was weezy and gutless (paid $50 for the car), and my mother was driving it at the time, so it was also a flawed part. The wheel tilted up into the fender, so the problem was most obvious. Cast/forged parts do fail I guess, especially when old! > I've read on the subject (including the manual) does not address the > air springs that are also connected to the axle. Factory air springs? Personally ever heard of that (means nothing) but can't you just disconnect/remove them? > underneath the car spraying bolts down with PB Blaster and preparing to > tackle the job, Prepare to replace all the brake lines; they're ancient, and almost certainly frozen useless. > etc., but this'd be my first time working on a drivetrain on a car. ... and a weird one it is! It's alien, but not complex. Not many people have experience with them. Heavy monster it is though! _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com