I sold the auto rear end that was in it.
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Now I have a standard 79 rear end and two 70 rear ends to chose from.
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I have done exactly this on my 2L FI 3.9 with LSD (ATB really) and it is great (especially considering prior I had a heavy late 132 diff with 3.4 ratio). I have yet to test my track times at a familiar track but it has much more zip and the weight reduction is noticeable. It is a bit of work but well worth it.vandor wrote:Here are the 3.9:1 gears for the earlier rear end:
http://www.autoricambi.us/product/DR9-4 ... 391-Ratio/
Or the complete third member (sorry, no pic):
http://www.autoricambi.us/product/DR9-4 ... 391-Ratio/
I would go with the 3.90 for that setup.
In general I like the early rear ends because they are a lot lighter, and the gears are easier to set up or replace.
But if you already have a 3.90 from a 2L car, use it. You will need the panhard rod that came with that rear end.
On the late style rear end there were 3 different types of gears used - about every 2 years Fiat would make the gears stronger. This would indicate to me that the early ones are failure prone.
Keep the early rears as spares.
Also the rear tail shaft length is different (the nose of the later diffs is longer than the earlier ones.spiderrey wrote:Things that I already know. Need to use matching panhard rod. Need to use matching drive shaft. I know the backing plates are different because I just took three rearends apart to sand blast and paint the pieces. The early plates are held on by 10 mm bolts, well the late ones are held on by 17 mm bolts. And earlier today I did notice the centering flange on the late axles. See pic. Id like to know the actual weight difference though.
Both of these are Lada parts. This ratio was only available in a Fiat 124 for one year, in the Euro version of the Sedan with the TC engine. Because of this I was never able to find these gears in Italy. However it was a fairly common ratio for Ladas.spiderrey wrote:Csaba, thanx for the info. I recall reading that these gear sets were available for the early setup. But I also recall that there were issues with them. Is that the case. Who manufactures them?
Is there any obvious way of checking, were there any specific markings?vandor wrote:Yes, I have seen gear sets that were not made correctly, I actually ended up with a set like that 7-8 years ago, and I did not notice it until I installed them in the third member and was not able to set up the lash correctly. It seemed like the manufacturing on the gear teeth was not finished. Now I have my supplier check each set before they send them out, and I also check them when we receive them.