yes they are, if it is made by Jesse I trust that it wont break, but then the dirty sanchez tends to defy all logic
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yes they are, if it is made by Jesse I trust that it wont break, but then the dirty sanchez tends to defy all logic
http://www.stazworks.com/products.htm
did you talk to stazworks?
They are beefy!!!
http://i47.photobucket.com/albums/f1...-beefy-ohs.jpg
I can't speak on any of those other than the 'stock' ones, but I can say he is a super cool guy who doesn't mind talking to you about your specific situation. He does good, clean work and I highly recommend him also.
I called to place my order last summer while out of town. If I remember correctly Jesse said that the yoke was billet or something like that... Cost $60 shipped and by the time I got home it was there. As far as other products are concerned I had my old rear driveshaft made by Tom Woods, great product but lacked in the customer service department. In my opinion High Angle was much easier to deal with...
I had my new driveshaft's made by Houston Drivetrain Service and they were awesome. Great customer service and they completed the work in a day at a good price.
I'm missing the issue here too...which picture of the welded yoke are we talking about? Unfortunately the paradigm of round driveshafts and yokes is inherently flawed when it comes to strength of connection. It's like having a shaft with no splines! The weld transfers all the torsional force! I recommend you throw away that round tube garbage, grind some flats onto the yoke and stick it in a piece of square tubing. Toss a little weld at it (which now, with this inherently better design, has the sole purpose of holding the two pieces together...torsional force is transferred by the square interface!) and you're good to go! Advice and technical assessment free of charge...you're welcome! :D
yes, i would say so since it is welded onto a flange where it would normally be welded to tube. Its a 1410 yoke pressed into some flange made for a sand rail. it's not just butt welded to it. the flange halves are indexed with a ring and bolt together. i seriously doubt it would be prone to shearing. it is plenty beefy
while this is true, gluing two pieces of steel together for a driveshaft is stupid.
Is that a front or rear output? 32 spline?
how much angle are you going to be able to get out of that set up?
38 degrees