X2, that is a limited slip. To pull the shafts you need to remove the cross shaft, push an axle shaft in far enough to slip a c clip off, then slide the axle shaft out. Getting the spiders, clutch packs, S-spring (in some LSDs), and spider gear washers/shims back in can be interesting. Mind taking a shot looking straight into the hole in the side of the carrier?
One of the major safety rules is to ALWAYS use jackstands. Do not rely on a jack to keep a vehicle in the air.Sure I can do that but it wont be until tonight. I just got cleaned up and am about to head off for work.
Sorry for my ignorance, but where is the cross shaft?
This was the first axle I've ever removed myself. And oh boy did I learn a lesson. SUPPORT THE VEHICLE WELL because the jack fell over and then the jeep fell on top of the differential cracking my gas tank.
That is a limited slip yes.....the open carriers are more rounded on the end where as that one is squared off where the clutch packs are.
The cross shaft is the shaft that goes through the two differential spider gears, it crosses the carrier at a right angle to the axle shafts. You can see the ends through the sides of the carrier (one is pictured right next to the ring gear teeth.) You have to remove the retention pin/bolt to remove the cross shaft, on a d35 this is a 12 point 1/4" or 5/16" headed bolt, on an 8.25 I believe it is a 5/16" 6 point head. You should use a good quality 5/16" wrench and NOTHING else, if you try to jam a socket in there at an angle or use an 8mm wrench or anything else, you are liable to round the bolt head off... which really sucks because then you can't get the cross shaft out, which means you can't get the axle shafts out, which means you can't get the carrier or the gears out. It's a royal pain in the ass when that happens and I learned this lesson by doing it to my 8.8, ended up very carefully welding the head of another bolt onto what was left of the original, then heating the bolt/carrier till the threadlocker softened and carefully backing the bolt out.
One of the major safety rules is to ALWAYS use jackstands. Do not rely on a jack to keep a vehicle in the air.
Not quite the sameyep. just rounded the head of the cross pin retaining bolt on a junkyard 8.25 in my garage that i was pulling shafts from. it split an 8mm socket (same as a 5/16). gonna be fun to fix.
yep... for instance if a 9/16 (14.28mm) seems too rusty to remove without rounding off, you can hammer a 14mm onto it. I've put 12mm 12-points onto 1/2" (or 13mm, not really sure) heavily rusted d30 unit bearing bolts that I thought would never come out, they came out on the first try.very few metric 'equivelants' are actually equal equal to their sae partners, a good mechanic uses this to his advantage!