wmburns
SN Certified Technician
Did you remove the brakes when setting the preload? Ideally, the extra load on the pinion should be as small as possible so that the torque wrench is seeing only the bearing pre-load.
I have done three pinion nut installs. In each case, the turning of the nut was a real work out. Easily 150+ foot pounds. The actual crushing of the sleeve could be felt. It required turning the pinion nut in very small increments (towards the end, less than 1/4" of wrench movement) to get the preload correct.
From your post, the flange was not fully seated when the pre-load measurement was taken. The flange must be fully seated as well as the bearing races fully seated into the diff. The crush sleeve can not provide enough force to seat an unseated race. Something to consider is installing the flange with no crush sleeve. Tighten everything together overloading the preload. This may provide enough force to fully seat the races. Remove and redo correctly.
This may explain why backlash changed and the gears whined. Obviously, the paint markings taken prior to this are useless because the preload/set up is not correct.
There must have been something else dragging on the pinion to account for the turning effort. Hence the false torque reading.
From prior bad experiences, my last rear end rebuild I removed the entire axle from the car. This afforded better access and easier working conditions. It showed up in the final result (my best by far).
I have done three pinion nut installs. In each case, the turning of the nut was a real work out. Easily 150+ foot pounds. The actual crushing of the sleeve could be felt. It required turning the pinion nut in very small increments (towards the end, less than 1/4" of wrench movement) to get the preload correct.
From your post, the flange was not fully seated when the pre-load measurement was taken. The flange must be fully seated as well as the bearing races fully seated into the diff. The crush sleeve can not provide enough force to seat an unseated race. Something to consider is installing the flange with no crush sleeve. Tighten everything together overloading the preload. This may provide enough force to fully seat the races. Remove and redo correctly.
This may explain why backlash changed and the gears whined. Obviously, the paint markings taken prior to this are useless because the preload/set up is not correct.
There must have been something else dragging on the pinion to account for the turning effort. Hence the false torque reading.
From prior bad experiences, my last rear end rebuild I removed the entire axle from the car. This afforded better access and easier working conditions. It showed up in the final result (my best by far).
