EXP Jawa
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2014
- Threads
- 3
- Messages
- 1,011
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- Location
- Rochester, NY
- Website
- www.torsen.com
- First Name
- Rick
- Vehicle(s)
- 1999 Cobra Convertible, Electric Green
Had to:
I guess that depends on what axles you're familiar with - 4.09:1 ratios aren't unheard of either. However, what it comes down to is the combination of tooth numbers on the ring and pinion. If Ford decided to redesign the previous gear set (4.10) to make it stronger or more durable, one way to do that is to revise the size and shape of the gear teeth. Usually, that results in a different number of teeth for a give ring size (more smaller teeth or fewer larger teeth). The target would've been the same approximate ratio, but you've got to work with the tooth counts that fit. So, 4.10 might become 4.09:1 in that situation.yeah strange they could not have made it the popular and well known 4.10
Ring and pinion set up is not complicated, but it is tedious and requires specialized knowledge and a few special tools. Specifically, both the pinion gear and the differential need to be shimmed correctly to make sure that the mesh between the ring and pinion gear is correct. It isn't rocket surgery, but it does require that you know what you're doing - or, are very patient and have good reference material.nice find, may consider this mod for faster acceleration.
so how does it work exactly? dose the entire diff need to be disassembled? and replace the 3.73 ring/pinon set with the 4.09?
I saw they have the installation kit, bolt kit, and seal kit as well for that, do I need that too?
lastly, is it DIY friendly?
To do the job, the entire carrier assembly needs to be disassembled. The axle shafts out, the cover off so that the differential itself can be removed from the carrier, as well as the pinion gear. The previous ring gear has to be removed from the differential case/body and replaced with the new. The pinion is installed into the axle carrier, and must be shimmed for depth (fore/aft position). This controls meshing location on the gear teeth. Then the diff/ring gear can be put into place and shimmed for side-to-side placement. This controls backlash between the ring and pinion (see earlier comments).
Again, not technically difficult, but time consuming and finicky.
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