RSchwarzli
TDR MEMBER
Looking for guidance. I am aware front to rear gear ratios do not have to be 100% the same. Many new fords even come with a slight difference in ratio (example 4.10 to 4.11).
The 90 has 3.08 axles. I want to stick a Dana 80 into the truck, but dont want to lose my lovely highway gears. And as the best highway gear I can get for an 80 is 3.31.....
Talking to Randys Ring and Pinion they say 4% is acceptable difference on off road non pavement applications. The internet in general seems to feel the same.
So the tire I run currently is a 265/70/17 aka a 31.6" tall tire.
A 285/70/17 is 32.7" tall.
My proposed theory I need someone with experience to verify:
If I run a 3.08 front on 265/70/17, and run 285/70/17 on the 3.31 Dana 80.... in theory that means via on line calculators that at 2000 rpm in OD, that would be 84 mph front, and 81 mph rear. Never would be that fast in 4wd so thats kinda pointless calculation. Worded better is the at that speed and rpm the front covers 3769 ft/min while the rear does 3618. Thats 4.01% difference.
Anyone really good with these numbers and can verify or kill this idea? I feel that I am in the 4% and for the one emergency situation I may actually use 4wd I would likely be fine. But I want to ensure my bad day when I need 4wd doesnt turn into a worse day when I rip the 205 out of the truck for mismatched gears. lol
Thanks.
Robert
The 90 has 3.08 axles. I want to stick a Dana 80 into the truck, but dont want to lose my lovely highway gears. And as the best highway gear I can get for an 80 is 3.31.....
Talking to Randys Ring and Pinion they say 4% is acceptable difference on off road non pavement applications. The internet in general seems to feel the same.
So the tire I run currently is a 265/70/17 aka a 31.6" tall tire.
A 285/70/17 is 32.7" tall.
My proposed theory I need someone with experience to verify:
If I run a 3.08 front on 265/70/17, and run 285/70/17 on the 3.31 Dana 80.... in theory that means via on line calculators that at 2000 rpm in OD, that would be 84 mph front, and 81 mph rear. Never would be that fast in 4wd so thats kinda pointless calculation. Worded better is the at that speed and rpm the front covers 3769 ft/min while the rear does 3618. Thats 4.01% difference.
Anyone really good with these numbers and can verify or kill this idea? I feel that I am in the 4% and for the one emergency situation I may actually use 4wd I would likely be fine. But I want to ensure my bad day when I need 4wd doesnt turn into a worse day when I rip the 205 out of the truck for mismatched gears. lol
Thanks.
Robert