Author Topic: rear end swap 4.08 to 3.27  (Read 91722 times)

ja17

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Re: rear end swap 4.08 to 3.27
« Reply #150 on: July 11, 2004, 21:51:52 »
Hello John,
I was the person who manufactured those drive shaft wrenches. I'll add photos first chance!

Joe Alexander
Blacklick, Ohio
Joe Alexander
Blacklick, Ohio
1969 Dark Olive 280SL
2002 ML55 AMG (tow vehicle)
2002 SLK32 AMG (350 hp)
1982 300TD Wagon turbo 4spd.
1963 404 Mercedes Unimog (Swedish Army)
1989 flu419 Mercedes Unimog (US Army)
1998 E430
1974 450SLC Rally
1965 220SE Finback

Benz Dr.

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Re: rear end swap 4.08 to 3.27
« Reply #151 on: July 11, 2004, 22:20:45 »
I am at home. I do this on all the tie rod bar assembly replacements I do. Assemblies are almost always cheaper than individual pieces. This car uses a 107 part numbered assy.

Daniel G Caron
1966 230SL 5 speed, LSD, header pipes, 300SE distributor, ported, polished and balanced, AKA  ''The Red Rocket ''
Dan Caron's SL Barn

1970  3.5 Coupe
1961  190SL
1985   300CD  Turbo Coupe
1981  300SD
2013  GMC  Sierra
1965  230SL
1967 250SL
1970 280SL
1988 560SEC

n/a

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Re: rear end swap 4.08 to 3.27
« Reply #152 on: July 12, 2004, 03:51:42 »
Joe,

Are you going to keep these available? They sure look like the way to go. If you could email me (johnliving@cox.net) the photos you had on the ebay listing, I'll include them in my axle swap pages.

John

quote:
Originally posted by ja17

Hello John,
I was the person who manufactured those drive shaft wrenches. I'll add photos first chance!

Joe Alexander
Blacklick, Ohio



John Livingston
Newport News, VA
1968 280SL 4 speed manual

n/a

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Re: rear end swap 4.08 to 3.27
« Reply #153 on: July 14, 2004, 19:23:44 »
Got the car back from the "mechanic" today complete with its state inspection sticker. After a panicky moment when I thought they'd botched the clutch hydraulics (turned out to be a sticky pedal), I calmed down and got it on the highway. Still very pleased with the overall driveability. I tried having my son time us past mile markers with the rpm at a steady 3000. The speedo showed that would've been about 54 mph at the old ratio. The stopwatch showed we were now doing about 67 (there was enough variability that I wonder how accurate the Virginia mile markers are). Suffice it to say that the change means the difference, on a 55 mph highway, between being constantly passed and keeping up with or even ahead of  most traffic. Hallelujah!

The rear of the car definitely seems a lot less squeaky than the front now. Guess I'll have to keep working on that end. The mechanic pretty much botched the exhaust install (he was piecing together various dissimilar bits, so it wasn't entirely his fault, I guess), so it bumps the underside pretty often.  I'll have to take it to a real muffler shop and see if they can't improve on things. Eventually I'll probably spring for an entire stainless set up.

I'm not happy with the camber with the new Olson compensating spring. With the hard top on and a full tank of gas, it still sits a bit high in the back. And most of the time I've got the hard top stowed. I have a new spring compressor to try, so eventually I'll try different, thinner pads for the spring.

There was something else, but we're getting a severe storm warning, so I'd better sign off. I'll try to summarize most of this thread on a couple of web pages, along with all those scintillating snapshots.

Thanks again to all for your tremendous help and patience with this old rube.

John

John Livingston
Newport News, VA
1968 280SL 4 speed manual
« Last Edit: July 14, 2004, 19:29:22 by n/a »