Are you talking front or rear driveline? The rear driveline Ujoints are held in place with injected plastic.
Are you talking front or rear driveline? The rear driveline Ujoints are held in place with injected plastic.
I know about the plastic. Don't you just heat them up with a torch to get them out?
unless you're a caveman mechanic using a hammer and no fire.
Spicer, Precision, or Napa (reboxed Precisions)... and regardless what people may think, any greaseable joint will hold up fine... when was the last time you heard of a joint actually breaking?
Spicer, Precision, or Napa (reboxed Precisions)... and regardless what people may think, any greaseable joint will hold up fine... when was the last time you heard of a joint actually breaking?
How many miles on the truck? If they are bad and they don't get replaced they could fail.
Had a friend in his 06 Driving though KS 850 miles away from home pulling a camper felt a vibration before he could stop his truck lost power wouldnt do anything in 2wd or 4wd just trying to get off the road. When dawn came the tailhousing on the transmission was shattered and the transfer case was hanging. The u joint failed while the transmission was under load when it went to no load that caused the tailhousing to shatter. Towed into the local dealership the service guy knew exaxtly what parts to order, because he had seen this several times. 2 grand new front and rear driveshafts and new tailhousing and all new seals 30 hours later back on the road and this was 3 days ago... . that is the last time i heard of a u joint actually failing...
Also I have another friend who works for a Directions Drilling company and there 1 tons spend their whole life hooked to over 20,000 he said he has had the same issues.
Yeah, his ujoint ran dry of lubrication, causing it to seize (that was the most likely the vibration)... been there done that; but that's NOT a broken ujoint. I had to replace all my ujoint by 75k because they were seizing. And further, I've read of faulty transfercases having the same explosive issue you've described... point being, one may or may not have lead to the other.
My point was that some think the zerk fitting and associated gundrilled cross causes so mush weakness that the joints will literally break or crack... simple answer, it doesn't happen too often in a truck thats driven halfways normal.
Anyone who owns a 3rd gen truck should (on a regular basis) pull the driveshafts and flex the ujoints to ensure they are still smooth, starting about 50k. When I pulled mine, it was to the point I could not flex it by hand... or even locking it in the vice. When I shut down, it literally welded itself together. Sitting installed in the truck, it looked fine.
Well my driveshaft is squeeking and I'm at 107K so I'm doing mine this week.
BTW my drive shaft is original untouched 2004. I see clips.
So, to ease my mind I'm gonna go ahead and replace mine @ 60,000 before I drive 2,500 miles towing. With that being said, I am interested in going with a grease able joint. Prolly the precision brand because I like my local O'Riellys, unless someone steers me else where.