If the output shaft yoke is not in line with the Pinion Yoke then you have to add the angles of the UJs both horizontally and vertically when calculating UJ angularity.
The yokes are only parallel at one moment at rest, when the car is moving the angles will move all over the place and the UJ angles will change constantly.
That is why they vibrate.
One question I have is why not fit a Toyota diff centre and axles if your concern is breaking diffs. There is even a template floating around somewhere on this forum to redrill the holes in the axle housing.
Have you considered the cost of new /altered driveshafts, which you will also suffer with Toyota diffs I guess.
BTW , The breaking of diffs is directly related to driving style with Rover diffs. The fault of the 2 planetary diffs is that the cross shaft starts to spin and picks up and I will put it in BOLD capitals IF YOU CONTINUALLY SPIN ONE WHEEL .
IMHO there could be a simple fix for this and that is to add a grubscrew to the hemishere that locks the pin in place in addition to the infamous circlip. BUT the major factor in Diff breakage is driving style, less spin more diff life.
Regards Philip A


Reply With Quote
I sense that you are a little bit swayed by 2 issues: (a) you're convinced that GQ diffs are very strong (they are, in the application for which they're used) and (b) you can obtain them at what you consider is a good price. Coupled with this, is access to what appears to be a well equipped workshop, so the potential engineering fab. issues are seemingly discounted. But you haven't fully explored the engineering theory and practice... which ultimately could be the major failure point for you.
There are regular series of 4wd off road races in which owners /sponsors invest upwards of half a mil. dollars in design mods, specialised parts etc in the quest to build a machine that takes what they can throw at it... and they break down and get beaten usually by those who understand how to extract optimum performance within the design limits of the vehicle and drive accordingly... 


Bookmarks