John Coffey Posted May 19, 2000 Share #1 Posted May 19, 2000 FYI... this little adventure happened exactly a week before my recentexcursion into the PIR turn 2 tire wall.Third autocross run (the money run) at the Cal Club autocross at HollywoodPark in Inglewood, CA. I KNOW this will be the fast time of the day (FTD)run! Funny how you get that feeling just before...Second gear, right hand turn onto the only real straight in the course. I'mpretty much foot-to-the-floor exiting the turn at 2500 rpm when I hear aBANG and the engine instantly hits the rev limiter. The car gets a littlesquirrley as I let off the gas and coast off the course.As I roll into the paddock I'm revving the engine a bit and trying all thegears in the transmission. They seem to engage fine but I get no forwardpropulsion. I can also hear a grinding from the rear. As I come to a stopand shutoff I'm thinking, "Blew up the $1,000 Quaife diff...Son-of-a-bitch!" I crawl under the back of the car and look around. Nooil, no debris, nothing appears broken, but the car won't got forward underpower. Great...Bryan Lampe drives up after finishing his third run (and kicking my arse).He seems to be around whenever I break something. I need to look into thissome more, but first, let me see if I can kill him. I ask Bryan to look atthe halfshafts while I start the car and put it in gear. He says OK andcrawls under the back of the car.I fired the car up, put it in first, and applied a little power. After afew seconds Bryan's head pops up and says, "Stub axle's busted." I shut thecar off and get out. He points to the left rear brake drum and, sure enough,the center is pushed out and cracked, looking all the world like a crater onthe Moon. FYI... Quaife's need some resistance on each wheel for them tomove the power around correctly, otherwise they send all the power to theaxle with no resistance - my broken stub axle.So, we push my car onto the trailer and I'm feeling a lot better 'cuz a stubaxle is a LOT cheaper than a new diff. On the way home I call Hiten Patelto see if I can use one of the stub axles he left at Erik's shop (EMIRacing) as part of the struts I'm having built (a whole 'nuther story). Hesays OK, so I stop by Erik's and grab both stub axles (never know which willwork). Luckily I have a set of spare drums at home.On Monday I go to MSA and Sam sells me bearings and lock nuts. Monday nightI jack the car up and start stripping the left rear. Well... the stub axlebroke in a weird way. The flange separated from the axle so I had to figureout a way to use the halfshaft mounting bolts to keep the stub axle fromturning while removing the lock nut (180 ft lbs of torque holding that thingon). Normally, a broken stub axle can be pulled/pounded out from each end.After bending two screwdrivers and breaking a Craftsman box wrench I had tofind something better.Searching through my collection of old tools I found a thick open end wrenchthat said, "Forged in USA." It fit perfectly over a halfshaft bolt and theother end anchored to the lower control arm like it was made for the job.This is now my "Stub Axle Anti-Torque Wrench" and resides in an importantplace in my tool box.So... now I've got the rear of the car on 6 jackstands and 2 floor jacks,the crimped sections of the lock nut ground off, the SAATW wrench hooked up,a breaker bar on the lock nut, 4' of pipe on the breaker bar, and all 200lbs (my wife says 210) of me standing on the pipe. Nothing. I wiggle alittle bit while balancing on the pipe. Nothing. I jump up and land on thepipe. CRACK! CLANG! THUD-OOOF! Me and the pipe hit garage floor.My wife sticks her head in the garage, "Are you dead yet?" She's such aloving woman (I'm worth a 1/4 million dollars dead and she gets it all).Anyway, the CRACK was the lock nut breaking loose so I was in business! Thedisassembly, reassembly went easy enough and the next night (after a trip tothe machine shop) the car was back together.I did learn that there are different sized stub axles. The splined end thatgoes to the halfshaft has a larger OD for 280Zs. There are basicallyinterchangeable as long and the halfshaft piece matches the stub axle youare using and you use the correct spacer between the stub axle bearings(almost always the "B" spacer for a 240Z).FYI... I was VERY lucky that the wheel and drum stayed attached to my carwhen the stub axle broke. Stub axle failure is not unusual for a 30 yearold 240Z that's raced/autocrossed. Next time you are working on the rearbrakes, clean and check the parts of the stub axle and flange that you canget to. Look for hairline cracks. Also, pull the halfshaft and check thelocknut for proper torque.----------------------------John Coffeyjohncof@veriomail.com Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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