navsnipe
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Dave
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2020
- Threads
- 4
- Messages
- 440
- Reaction score
- 893
- Location
- Rockland County, NY
- Vehicle(s)
- 20 Ranger FX4 Lariat (totaled), 23 Audi Q5
- Occupation
- Automating Buildings and confusing humans
You could probably make a mold out of tin foil and fill it with silicone caulk. The silicone should give you the flex you're looking for. Either that or raid a plastic surgeon's trash bin for some silicone...My very non scientific "cram stuff in there till it stops" carrier bearing experiment seems to indicate that for ME , and MY TRUCK ONLY , that about 50% less flex than factory is the sweet spot , before when I had it solid , downhill had issues that I didn't notice before , I softened it up and all seems good now , as an added bonus, and I just may have jinxed it , my stoplight "bump " , which I assumed was the slip joint, seems to have disappeared since I started messing with it , not sure why on that but I'll take it , again , non scientific, unloaded truck , not pulling anything, maybe it will be terrible under those circumstances, maybe my actual carrier bearing will go bad now and start screaming, no idea ...
@Shawn at Tom Wood's
Do you know of something that could be mixed and poured in there that would still have some flex to it?
Or maybe if too stiff a series of holes could be drilled around it to give more flex ? I can't imagine anything I cram in there will stay long term , the electric cord was wiggling out a little with only about 20 miles on it , I assume the hose I have in there now will also ...
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