Page 1 of 6 123 ... LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 54

Thread: 35 spline Dana 60 conversion

  1. #1
    klappers Guest

    35 spline Dana 60 conversion

    Just started doing a little bit of research into doing this and I think that I have cracked it...

    Well I hope so.

    Would it be as simple as assembling these parts and then chucking it in the diff?

    Obviously the first part to start is here

    http://completeoffroad.com/i-122941-...225sl-29b.html

    Then some of this


    http://nationaldrivetrain.com/shopsi...l/dana_60.html


    Then some of this

    KAM Differentials Limited

    Followed by some of this goodness

    Rover Tracks Heavy Duty Land Rover Accessories


    Would it be this simple???

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Stockton, NSW
    Posts
    2,769
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Its pretty straight forward, Get the axles and stub axles from rovertracks, about 1200 including shipping when i last heard, get a local machine shop to modify your hubs to suit snf get a d60 locker of your choice, i went with a ARB(RD36 i think it was) and assemble it. you can keep the original CWP unless your looking at changing ratios?

  3. #3
    klappers Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by cal415 View Post
    Its pretty straight forward, Get the axles and stub axles from rovertracks, about 1200 including shipping when i last heard, get a local machine shop to modify your hubs to suit snf get a d60 locker of your choice, i went with a ARB(RD36 i think it was) and assemble it. you can keep the original CWP unless your looking at changing ratios?
    Yep, looking at changing ratios which is why there is a link in there to KAMS... 4.1

    do you need the stubs?? I was under the impression that due to the high level of Land Rover quality control that in some instances you wont need to change them

  4. #4
    klappers Guest
    Well good old ebay has certrainly turned up some bargains as far as lockers and R&P goes

  5. #5
    klappers Guest
    Rover Tracks - Land Rover Extreme Driveline Specialists


    some very nice light reading here

    and this got me thinking....


    what about this that I saw on ebay before... I wonder if the spacing is right. If it is, then there would be no need to spend $800 on spindles from rovertracks... just bore out your hub to accept the bigger wheel bearings

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/SPIND...Q5fAccessories


    These are the measurements for the spindles

    Total length -- 7.48"

    Flang Dia -- 6.75"

    Wonder how close this is to the rover stuff???

    Anyone got one to handy to measure?

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Sydney
    Posts
    1,681
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by klappers View Post
    Yep, looking at changing ratios which is why there is a link in there to KAMS... 4.1
    The page you linked to is for LandRover centres. You'll find there aren't many ratios for Salisbury/D60 that match LandRover diffs.

    Fortunately, 4.11 is available with both diffs. Have a look at the D60 stuff on the Yukon site - that's what I've got. You need to play around with the tailshaft though - the pinion ends with a yoke, not a flange. Not hard.

    And, re LandRover diffs in the front, check that the 4.11 you paid for isn't 4.10. 4.11 is stronger. That's happened to me in the past.

    Regards
    Max P

  7. #7
    klappers Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Tusker View Post
    The page you linked to is for LandRover centres. You'll find there aren't many ratios for Salisbury/D60 that match LandRover diffs.

    Fortunately, 4.11 is available with both diffs. Have a look at the D60 stuff on the Yukon site - that's what I've got. You need to play around with the tailshaft though - the pinion ends with a yoke, not a flange. Not hard.

    And, re LandRover diffs in the front, check that the 4.11 you paid for isn't 4.10. 4.11 is stronger. That's happened to me in the past.

    Regards
    Max P
    KAM link is the third one down..

    1st link is for a D60 detroit

    2nd for a D60 4.1 Ratio

    3rd for a 4.1 KAM ratio swap

    4th for Rover tracks

    I didnt really want 4.11

    4.1 is 25% stronger then standard anyway (KAM)...

    and 4.1 is a standard D60 ratio.. which is 120 bucks from the states

  8. #8
    klappers Guest
    what about those D60 spindles?? Anyone got a spare LR one to measure

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jul 2008
    Posts
    433
    Total Downloaded
    0
    I' ve converted my Salisbury to 35 Spline 1.5" Dana 60 using Rovertrack's axles & stubs.

    I think you'll find that the 1.5" axles are too large to fit through the internal axle hole, and you'll need the new stubs - or at a minimum unacceptably weaken the old. Check with Keith from Rover tracks he knows inside out. You do end up with larger wheel bearings and stronger stubs so there is a benefit, especially with larger offset wheels.

    The Dana 60 is very similar to the Salisbury except that the Sals was converted to metric e.g. 12mm vs 1/2" for the CW bolts. You'll need one of these to fit the larger axles in - I went ARB Dana 60 which in this case is a stronger centre then the Sals


    I would also check with Keith whether your hubs are OK, I bought Disco 1 hubs as my County hubs were unsuitable and had machined for new wheel bearing caps. Side benefit is the wheel studs were longer, so my wheels nuts are fully engaged now.



    Clive

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    WA
    Posts
    13,786
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by klappers View Post

    do you need the stubs?? I was under the impression that due to the high level of Land Rover quality control that in some instances you wont need to change them
    Yes you definitely need stubs for 35 spline (1.5"). Some OEM stubs were IME machined just large enough to fit 1.3" 30 spline though.

Page 1 of 6 123 ... LastLast

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!