" From: "Jim Blair" <carnuck@xxxxxxxxxxx> " " A: Doing one in the front of an Eagle wouldn't make sense as the housing is " special for the IFS D30 and no strength would be gained. true. it was just the amc factor. " Now a D44 IFS chuck " might be the ticket (and since it was available stock in Jeeps, isn't that " close enough to AMC? <G> (I mean the 1963 J300 pickup with IFS) technically, that was from the pre-amc kaiser years... but you could justify it since d44 live axles were used in the amc years! " I worked on an Olds Tornado ('85 I think?) years ago with a D44 front " diff separate from the trans that seemed much like the Eagle one. that would be the '79-up downsized generation. sure it wasn't a gm 10-bolt? i've always liked the motor homes that were based on the 1st-gen toronado transaxle. they're still distinctive. " My '83 Eagle wagon was 2.37 and the '81 I had was 3.08. (I still have a " non-vacuum 3.08 front diff for sale.) hmmm... so 3.31s would definitely be on the low side even with an o/d. i vaguely recall that 4-cyl eagles got 3.31s? " From: adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Sandwich Maker) " " " -- " i've just discovered the d35 ifs front axle that ford used does " have a high pinion. two crazy ideas immediately came to mind: ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list