Announcement

Collapse

Forum will no longer be utilized!

After facing many challenges with utilization of this forum for many years, the board voted on the evening of 1/12/2026 to stop use of the forum in favor of the modern, more effective means.

Most of our general club organization will now be coordinated via Discord and results from our events along with schedules and announcements will be hosted on our main alscca.net webpage.

What does this mean for the old forum? Well, in short we are going to stop using it. This has been reviewed several times in the past few years, and there has been a desire for some of more tenured members of the club to have the historic content preserved. In an effort to preserve this content, it was discovered that we could not simply export the content to be placed in a modern website. This forum will now become an archive only forum and will not be monitored. If you wish to preserve any of the content, this is your time to search the pages to find it. There is no promise that this content will remain available forever with the fragile nature of this forum.
See more
See less

Dr Jeckyll

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #61
    Originally posted by seducksauce View Post
    I know this is from Zilvia (def not the most amazing place for intellectual knowledge), but there's several people I know of in person that have done this.



    These are apparently the different sized shims you can get from Nissan (allegedly each costs about $6.00):
    38424-40F60 =0.80mm
    38424-40F67 =1.01mm
    38424-40F75 =1.25mm
    38424-40F83 =1.49mm

    Even drift guys say the 0.80mm is plenty, as it locks very hard. So there's something to look into. For the cost of a tube of RTV, and a $6.00 shim, you could have a nice LSD.
    Well it depends on whether they are doing this to an open diff or a viscous . I have a whole drawer full of diff specific shims in differant thicknesses from past diff and ring and pinion I have built. The VLSD housing splits in 2 halves and the viscous unit sits inside and has a gear that engages all 4 of the spider gears. The viscous unit itself is not readily disassembleable but I can tighten the clearance shim that adjusts the load of the viscous gear against the spiders and if I do it tight enough it will actually bind the spiders up which should make it behave as a welded diff in a straight line but allow the wheels to turn independantly when turning . It could either work or it could build up heat excessively and cause it to gall but I have a couple of them laying in the garage so its not like im losing anything. Ill see how it goes .
    Last edited by zukitek; 02-17-2012, 05:47 PM.
    Ricky R
    95 240sx with LS1 power. $4500 drivetrain in a $500 car
    97 miata pretty much stock

    Comment


    • #62
      Originally posted by zukitek View Post
      Well it depends on whether they are doing this to an open diff or a viscous . I have a whole drawer full of diff specific shims in differant thicknesses from past diff and ring and pinion I have built. The VLSD housing splits in 2 halves and the viscous unit sits inside and has a gear that engages all 4 of the spider gears. The viscous unit itself is not readily disassembleable but I can tighten the clearance shim that adjusts the load of the viscous gear against the spiders and if I do it tight enough it will actually bind the spiders up which should make it behave as a welded diff in a straight line but allow the wheels to turn independantly when turning . It could either work or it could build up heat excessively and cause it to gall but I have a couple of them laying in the garage so its not like im losing anything. Ill see how it goes .
      I only briefly skimmed through that tutorial, but I thought I saw them actually disassembling the VLSD unit and swapping shims. I've never actually disassembled the inside of a diff. Only pulled the guts out and melted them to do unspeakable car things later.

      I only passed it along as I stumbled upon it and remembered you mentioning needing a quick fix.
      Nick Stone

      Comment


      • #63
        I read the thread and that is exactly what they are doing . They are shimming it tight enough to bind the spiders . I may give it a try but probably wont . It would be more effective to weld it and wouldnt have the potential to damage the thing . Still leaning towards the helical the heaviest though.
        Ricky R
        95 240sx with LS1 power. $4500 drivetrain in a $500 car
        97 miata pretty much stock

        Comment


        • #64
          Preloading the spiders is exactly what I've seen done for the VW trans as well.
          Matt W.
          18 SM - Lancer Evolution MR
          15 MR - Volkswagen Beetle
          Sponsors: Satellite Racing - Defined Performance

          Comment

          Working...
          X