For those with lowered Camaros
1 Attachment(s)
I am looking for recommendations on which high temp lube to use on the axle shafts or cv joints since my Camaro is lowered with 1.5" DSE springs. Did any of you change out the lube or did you keep it as is? I was told since the car is lowered more than 1" - it will add stress on them. Is this something I can do on my own easily or will I need a shop to do it?
|
Completely unrelated to your question...
But what tire size are you running and what springs do you have? |
Quote:
Fronts - 285/35 ZR 20 Rears - 315/35 ZR 20 I have the Detroit Speed Engineering 1.5" Lowering Springs with the Koni Orange STR.T struts. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
None at all. |
Kept mine as is. Lowered with the Eibach Pro + kit.
|
I’m not certain why this should add stress but I presume it’s added angle. A six-ball Rzeppa type joint like these use can handle more angle in the lower rpm range of an axle shaft. As opposed to many main drivelines that use them. A good high temp, extreme pressure grease should work but...you always risk some incompatibility issues when mixing greases. I can lead to early breakdown.
You’ll have to remove (and probably replace) at least one boot clamp to gain access to fill it. But you may not be talking about adding. I’m of the mind the only ‘right’ way would be to remove the shafts and boots, completely flush the old grease out repack it was a synthetic grease and replace the boots. They’re relatively cheap and are the only defense from external contamination - the death knell for any Rzeppa joint. I’ll try to get a grease part number. |
Quote:
Good info. I was told by several people and wasn’t sure. I was also told it was not recommended to go beyond a 1” drop for those reasons alone. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Quote:
How much of a drop did you go with and how long have you been driving it without the high temp lube recommendation? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Man, I’d be curious in the angle difference between stock and your drop. Especially at the wheel. Thinking the angle at the diff would be less. I could be all wet but I can’t believe it’s much. If it were like a degree or two, I’d trust the joints to work just fine. As long as the boots were in good shape.
Remember, this is the same style joint in a FWD car where the steering wheels move left to right all day every day. The OE shafts last a long time unless contaminated. That’s the proverbial shit ton more angle on the joint than a rear wheel moves. |
Any angle that the shaft is put through during normal suspension travel will also be okay for it to sit and operate at
|
Quote:
I was thinking the same. It would make sense that the angle would lessen when the car is dropped somewhat. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Unless there is a drastic change in the angle I suppose. |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:13 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.9 Beta 4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.