StevNimrod
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2008
- Messages
- 343
I have a 1994 Alpha 1 Gen 2 (of course I don't have the drive serial number handy). Last year I replaced the input yoke and the corresponding seal since I found a few tablespoons of gear lube in the u-joint bellows. The input yoke was pitted right where the seal rides so I figured that was the fix.
A couple months later, when I went to pull the engine again at the end of last season there was again gear lube in the u-joint bellows and I had noticed some lube loss in the remote gear lube reservoir
.
Any idea what's going on here?
Also, is resealing a drive something that can/should be done preventatively or do most people wait until they have water in the drive? There's a guy locally who is reputable and would do a full reseal for a little under $$$. I was going to pressure test the drive soon and see if it holds, which it should since I'm not getting water in the lube.
Which brings me to my final question - I generally like to at least attempt doing things once; is doing it myself feasible for a reseal job or would I spend more in special tools and frustration? For reference on mechanical ability, or lack thereof, I didn't find bellows replacement was as hard as everybody had me thinking it'd be (there were two or three times I walked away for five minutes); it was just time consuming.
A couple months later, when I went to pull the engine again at the end of last season there was again gear lube in the u-joint bellows and I had noticed some lube loss in the remote gear lube reservoir
Any idea what's going on here?
Also, is resealing a drive something that can/should be done preventatively or do most people wait until they have water in the drive? There's a guy locally who is reputable and would do a full reseal for a little under $$$. I was going to pressure test the drive soon and see if it holds, which it should since I'm not getting water in the lube.
Which brings me to my final question - I generally like to at least attempt doing things once; is doing it myself feasible for a reseal job or would I spend more in special tools and frustration? For reference on mechanical ability, or lack thereof, I didn't find bellows replacement was as hard as everybody had me thinking it'd be (there were two or three times I walked away for five minutes); it was just time consuming.