Pinion depth? I will Work on that! Thanks for the help I sure do appreciate it.
I think he is close but that blue does not give enough contrast.I hate that blue paint
Looking at it, it looks a little shallow. As far as shims are concerned you need to mix and match until you get your correct depth. If you think you'll need a another one or two thousands, then you'll have to change out some other shims in order to get that combination since the smallest they make is .003
Ok…Hold up before you get too far. I'm looking at the pictures and your coast side looks like it could be good. The drive side looks a little shallow but there is huge distortion in the picture. Re-post with some normal looking photos like this picture...
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If you are reusing old gears do not try to change the pinion depth as you already have an established pattern and do not want to change that. You also do not want to try make your backlash too tight. Unless you know what the backlash was before you tore the diff down I would shoot for .010 and not any tighter. Any real changes especially pinion depth run the risk of the gears making noise.Thanks for replying, The gear set is the original 130 k mile unit. this whole exercise is just to get me back on the road for now, I had a complete bearing failures in the front dana 30. The rear diff fluid looks just as bad. This is my test to see if I can do it. So far I have made the set up bearings and used the original shim measurement for the starting point. That post is the Friday post. pinion shim was added, .010 thousandths and the backlash is 4 thousandths. I went ahead and painted the yellow and ran the pattern and as you can see it is not right. The blue yellow mix Is the 7.5 thousandths backlash and I wonder if I should just leave everything alone…..I wonder if I am chasing my tail with a wore out gear set. I just need to make it drivable so I can tear apart the rear end and see how bad it is….then possibly, just possibly I will order a new set for the front and back axels…..I am pretty sure no one here is capable of doing it. As a last resort I will throw it on a trailer and take it to a good 4 by 4 shop. Sorry for the crappy pictures.
I have found setting gear pattern use a light coat of marking compound on clean gears. I see lists of posts with marking compound smeared all over the compound will transfer from one gear to the next making a clear pattern hard to see. I also wrap a rag around the pinion and pull down on it then use a wrench on the ring gear bolt to rotate the gears in the pattern marking compound to add some resistance or I hold the ring gear with a rag and rotate the pinion. Adding some resistance helps getting a clear pattern.