=========================================================== Give Your Team Access to Their PCs from Anywhere. Increase productivity with a secure remote-access solution from GoToMyPC Pro. Stay in touch with your office. FREE TRIAL: caaccMVb7yoMza/ ExpertCity =========================================================== On 13 05/20/04, Robert neal zimmerman wrote: > > I dont know my book I am looking at said that the 71 and up 8 3/4 rears had a wider width, while 62-70 were at 55.0inches flange to flange. not so. you might be reading the mopar chassis book. this is an inaccuracy. I collected a list of flange to flange measurements for various 8-3/4 housings. see: http://www.autohobbydigest.com/8_75.html the 64 was much wider than any other year B-body rear 62-70. notice the advertisements for the 64 Dodges which touted a "wider rear track". check Hollanders interchange and you'll see the 64 rear interchanges with *fullsize* Chryslers as well for 64. the 63s were narrower than any B rear that came in subsequent years. I think the 66-67 is the narrowest flange B housing, followed by the 65, and then the 68-70s.. On Thu, 20 May 2004 21:08:52 -0700 Robert neal zimmerman wrote: > A) is the early 8 3/4 rear just as strong as the later one? just as strong. > B) Is it this drum pulling that makes them tricky or are there > other drawbacks? thats pretty much it. another problem that tends to slip past the radar is the 57-63 8-3/4 open diffs had a different thrust block width than the 64-74 8-3/4s. 57-63 8-3/4 SG diffs had the same thrust block width as all 64-74 8-3/4 SG & opens, but those early open rears had a different thrust block width. if you look in a parts manuals for the early cars, you'll see two listings for axles for any given rearend housing, one axle for an open and one for an SG that makes a replacing an early 8-3/4 open chunk with *any year* SG or a 64-74 open troublesome (i.e. axle swap!). some six cylinder 8-3/4 (non-trucks) came with a weird 8-1/4 ring gear than fit a carrier that fit a STD 8-3/4 housing. I think in 60-61 it had its own casting#, but in 62-63 they put the ring gear in a 741 carrier. that was only on six cylinder --non-wagon-- B-bodies and Dodges and Plymouth's .. > C) are the early rearends harder to find parts for or do they > interchange just fine? the main differences in service items are the wheel bearing kits and seals. the time last I checked (3yrs ago?) they were still available. they will most likely be disco'd before the flange axle kits and seals... the bearing may be the same A7 bearing, but I think the collar is a different one than the flange axle kits. Doug Ahern Athens, GA =========================================================== Buy Stocks and Index Funds for just $4 No Account or Investment Minimums and No Inactivity Fees Automatically invest weekly or monthly and build your future. caaccMMb7yoMzf/ Sharebuilder =========================================================== ---- Please address private mail -- mail of interest to only one person -- directly to that person. I.e., send parts/car transactions and negotiations as well as other personal messages only to the intended recipient, not to the Clubhouse public address. This practice will protect your privacy, reduce the total volume of mail and fine tune the content signal to Mopar topic. Thanks! '62 to '65 Mopar Clubhouse Discussion Guidelines: http://www.1962to1965mopar.ornocar.org/mletiq.html. b7yoMz.