I would not trust anything on that page. It was never finished and has not been updated in years. Wheelers don't even bother with it. If you're looking for medium-duty 5x4.5 rear axles in the half-ton truck range of width, I'd probably go looking for D44 or Chryco 9.25's (don't know specific years) from under Dodge pickups. To answer the question about the late 60's/early 70's CJ's, 30-spline D44's - a good axle and desireable among the early CJ crowd, but offset if its a Dana 18 equipped rig. Zook owners whose rigs are not yet that large will usually seek out the offset ones. After that they start chasing Quadratrac SJ axles. -Spro -------------- Original message -------------- From: "Swygert, Francis G MSgt 436 CES/CECM" <Francis.Swygert3@xxxxxxxxxxxx> > Here's a good page outlining what axles Jeeps used. The links help a > lot! http://www.jeeptech.com/axle/ > It does state that "wheel to wheel" (mounting surfaces on drums?) width > of the narrow track Wagoneer (SJ) D44 axle is 58-59". The wide track > axle is 61-62", which would make it 2-3" narrower than a 63-66 > Classic/Ambo axle (tread width on those is about 63"), and that should > make it a good fit for an American. CJ AMC 20s are 50.5" narrow, 54.5" > wide track. No width for the SJ, but they should be the same as the 44. > The XJ/MJ axle is 60" or 60 3/4" wheel to wheel, and it's the same width > as AMC Eagle rear axles. It's known to be 2-3" wider than a > Hornet/et.al. axle, which is about the same width as the American. > > Now if you wanted to tub the car a little they would be great! You would > be better off with a FSJ rear end, that would be an AMC 20 w/one piece > axles, but you'd need to have the hubs redrilled for 5x4.5" bolt pattern > (it's 5x5.5" stock; w/HD 3/4 ton and 1 ton models using 8x6.5"). The > "wide track" FSJ axles (all w/factory fender flares) might be wide > enough for the American. They aren't real wide either. Even the FSJ axle > might require mini tubs though. The FSJ axles have been swapped into > CJs, so they aren't much wider (if any for the "narrow track"). > > The big Ford Bronco seems to have 62" wide 9" axles! Check though. If > it's a 62" axle that might be a good source for Ford 9". I'd check the > pickups too -- the big Bronc was F-150 based, I'm pretty sure of that. > The small Bronco uses 58" wide 9" (for V-8 models). Check the "axle > swap" link from the page I listed above. There are lots of good tech > articles for AMC axles and engines on this site, by the way! > > -------------- > Date: Wednesday, December 13, 2006 08:06 PM > From: markprice242@xxxxxxxxxxxx > > Speakin of old CJ's anyone kn ow what flavor axles came in what I would > estimate to be late 60's early 70's narrowtrack CJ's? I know of a yard > that had > a few. I think at the time I loooked I thought they had Dana 44's in > them, but > it's beena while and now I'm not sure. Any idea of width and would they > be > worth anything? Ratios used? > > > _______________________________________________ > AMC-List mailing list > AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx > http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list > > or go to http://www.amc-list.com _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com