SigOris
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- John
- Joined
- May 18, 2022
- Threads
- 47
- Messages
- 1,242
- Reaction score
- 4,088
- Location
- Greenwood Maine
- Vehicle(s)
- MY23 F150 CC Lariat PB & MY25 Mustang GT Convertible 60th #0807
- Occupation
- Retired DoD EE
You actually expect us to believe “ The Science “??? ????I just stumbled upon something interesting. I was trying to help answer some questions for a guy, with a Tacoma with a stock two-piece rear shaft, 5.29 gears, and 32 inch tires. He wanted to know if it is safe for him to pass people at around 90 mph. I told him, "definitely don't buy our drive shaft" because at 90mph his shaft will be spinning at 5,000 rpm. But the interesting part came when I used the spicer calculator to try and figure out the critical speed of his stock shaft for him. I never calculate the critical speeds of two-piece shafts of shaft because we don't build two-piece shafts. What's really weird is that if I change the drive shaft type from one-piece to two-piece in the Spicer calculator it has no effect on the result. Actually, if you compare our one-piece to the stock Ranger two-piece, the results say that our shaft has a HIGHER critical speed than the stock shaft. Run the numbers yourself. Here's the important data for each shaft.
Stock ranger shaft:
Our shaft:
- Style B shaft
- 3.5" 0.083" wall tube. In truth one section is 3.5 and the other section of the shaft is only 2.5 but lets pretend that they are both 3.5" diameter.
- 1330 series joints
- 62" center of joint to center of joint
Here's the calculator https://spicerparts.com/calculators/critical-speed-rpm-calculator
- Style A shaft
- 4" 0.083" wall tube.
- 1350 series joints
- 62" center of joint to center of joint
For those of you who don't want to do use the calculator, here's the results. Stock shaft 3,392 critical speed. Our single piece shaft 3,888 critical speed.
What does this mean? If you take things at face value it means that our shaft is SAFER than the stock shaft at high speeds, even if we ignore all the other issues with the stock shaft and focus solely on the critical speed. If you want to read between the lines a bit more it means that spicer and other "authorities" on the matter don't always come up with results that make sense or are correct and that you have to take things with a grain of salt sometimes.
PS. I got my two-part urethane yesterday. I may work on casting some bushing dampeners tonight, maybe later this week. Stay tuned for that.
interesting results and I just remembered my 69 Camaro had a one piece shaft and NO safety loop ?
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