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garryv84 Samba Member
Joined: August 10, 2010 Posts: 276 Location: Los Angeles
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 7:13 am Post subject: |
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Are the SA transmission braces still available? Will they fit a 2wd 4speed tranny? |
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gears Samba Member

Joined: October 28, 2002 Posts: 4411 Location: Tamarack, Bend, Kailua
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 7:38 am Post subject: |
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There is no damaging "case flex" along the length of the transaxle. The purpose of the brace is NOT to add strength, but rather to help cancel out damaging vibrations. _________________ aka Pablo, Geary
9.36 @ 146 in '86 Hot & Sticky
'90 Syncro Westy SVX
'87 Syncro GL 2.5
https://guardtransaxle.com |
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kgold708 Samba Member
Joined: April 16, 2011 Posts: 186 Location: Genoa IL
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 9:48 am Post subject: |
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Phishman068 wrote: |
^above poster,
Your understanding of sailboat rigging is 100% backwards. Generally the mast is quite weak and the shrouds and stays (Cables) carry load down to the deck to support it. The mast will even flex depending on the direction of force and one cable (opposite of the force) will take up nearly all the tension.
This application would not warrant such a setup.
. |
I was refering to the diamond spreader arrangement, not that all boats have this. But I suppose they should stop building mast out of those heavy aluminium extrusions and carbon fiber and such. Maybe use pvc and more wires, since the wires carry the load.
The wires and struts on bi-plane wings don't carry primary loads either if it makes you feel better  _________________ ASE Master Tech.
ASE L1 Advanced engine performance specialist.
ASE L2 Advanced electronic diesel engine specialist. |
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Jon_slider Samba Member

Joined: April 11, 2007 Posts: 5091 Location: Santa Cruz, Crowdifornia
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 10:01 am Post subject: |
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gears wrote: |
snowsyncro wrote: |
The SA Syncro guys have developed a Syncro-specific brace. |
Great news .. I think any AEL guy has to follow up on this.
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Im on it, thanks for the kick start.
I have found someone willing and qualified to build a brace for an AEL syncro, and I will share more info when it is done, possibly in the next couple of weeks.
Betty is also getting a tranny cooler, and a change in driving style. Im very hopeful all these interventions will prolong her tranny life. _________________ My Soapboxes: Inflation; Handling; Gearing; Decoupling; Swepco |
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snowsyncro Samba Member
Joined: January 11, 2009 Posts: 1557 Location: East Preston, Nova Scotia, Canada
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 10:54 am Post subject: |
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Jon_slider wrote: |
This just in, from our South African correspondent:
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Great work, Jon! Thanks.
RonC |
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kgold708 Samba Member
Joined: April 16, 2011 Posts: 186 Location: Genoa IL
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 11:23 am Post subject: |
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gears wrote: |
There is no damaging "case flex" along the length of the transaxle. The purpose of the brace is NOT to add strength, but rather to help cancel out damaging vibrations. |
I don't mean case flex as in bending like a bannana, I'm thinking more like .020-.050" over the length of the transaxle. IDK what it would take to move the internals out of spec. I've never even seen a syncro in person, I'm just trying to provide some objective opinions, I find it helpful when I've got a head scratcher to deal with.
I know that "case flex" is a MAJOR design consideration when they design new trans components. Of course now they can model it w/FEA software at the design stage. This is why most modern cars don't even have trans dipsticks and the cases look like a waffle iron. In any case that "brace" doesn't look like any "vibration damper" I've ever seen, that is a "structural brace" IMHO. I don't really buy into the idea that the internals are vibrating to failure. Something is moving out of spec under load. Or the case itself, the fix explains the problem in this "CASE" _________________ ASE Master Tech.
ASE L1 Advanced engine performance specialist.
ASE L2 Advanced electronic diesel engine specialist. |
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IdahoDoug Samba Member

Joined: June 12, 2010 Posts: 10357 Location: N. Idaho
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 12:39 pm Post subject: |
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Gears,
I agree. I can't see "case flex" being a problem with this case - essentially a well braced large diameter aluminum tube under relatively low horsepower (even with the 5 cyl). If the theory is that engine shake is shaking the trans like a dog wagging its tail....? That has to be the theory, because there is no engine torque/power flexing the tranny - no such bending force is taking place.
So if it's literally the shaking diesel causing the tranny case to whip up and down, then two comments come to mind:
1 - where is the evidence this is happening in terms of internal parts failure?
2 - does anyone have any idea how much force it would actually take to actually whip/flex the transmission enough to damage internal parts by making shaft bearings no longer align momentariy? Hint: more than engine vibrations.
Finally, if this is the working theory now "the 5 cylinder diesel shakes so badly that it is whipping my trans up and down so violently it is flexing the case and damaging internal parts" then there's a WAY easier fix I alluded to earlier. Simply change the sympathetic resonance of the transmission by either using harder durometer front mounts (very easy to make), or hanging a mass damper off the front of the trans (I suggested a soup can).
A brace with the available room of a Syncro like that black one above is not going to do it. In fact, I'm going to get more direct. It's pitifullly and totally useless and here's why. You can flex a part like that more degrees than you can flex the case under it. In other words, the case it is attached to is more rigid than the brace. Does that translate? The brace is so small in cross section and of a softer metal that it will actually flex through more degrees than the much stiffer trans case. Structurally, it is literally as though you are using the trans case to stiffen the little hand made brace.
I hate always being the bearer of bad news, but look it up. You will find that a brace flexes until it reaches its elastic limit and then resists further flex. The aluminum trans case will flex much less in terms of degrees of angle before it reaches its elastic limit because it is a massive cross section structural member of a stiffer material. With that brace attached, the trans can happily flex up and down its limited amount without even bending the softer steel brace to its limit where the brace would then resist further flex. A total and complete waste of time.
DougM _________________ 1987 2WD Wolfsburg Vanagon Weekender "Mango", two fully locked 80 Series LandCruisers. 2017 Subaru Outback boxer. 1990 Audi 90 Quattro 20V with rear locking differential, 1990 burgundy parts Vanagon. 1984 Porsche 944, 1993 Toyota LandCruiser, 2002 BMW 325iX, 1982 Toyota Sunrader |
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j_dirge Samba Member

Joined: August 08, 2007 Posts: 4641 Location: Twain Harte, CA
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 12:54 pm Post subject: |
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I think I'd be looking to source a UN1......
Can't be that much more work than trying to brace the VW TA properly. _________________ -89 GL Westy, SVX.. finally.
-57 pan f/g buggy with a 67 pancake Type 3 "S"
"Jimi Hendrix owned one. Richard Nixon did not"
-Grand Tour, Season 1, episodes 4 and 5
danfromsyr wrote: |
those are straight line runs with light weight race cars for only 1/4mile at a time..
not pushing a loaded brick up a mountain pass with a family of 4+ inside expecting to have an event free vacation..
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snowsyncro Samba Member
Joined: January 11, 2009 Posts: 1557 Location: East Preston, Nova Scotia, Canada
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 1:51 pm Post subject: |
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gears wrote: |
There is no damaging "case flex" along the length of the transaxle. The purpose of the brace is NOT to add strength, but rather to help cancel out damaging vibrations. |
Exactly. It is to raise the resonant frequency of the case beyond the range that is sympathetic with the rocking moment that is a result of having an odd number of cylinders. That would also be the reason why the fellow from South Africa (that Jon quoted) would see fit to use it on his V6. Two banks of 3 cylinders; same problem.
kgold708 wrote: |
In any case that "brace" doesn't look like any "vibration damper" I've ever seen, that is a "structural brace" IMHO. |
You are right. It is not a vibration damper, it is a stiffener.
IdahoDoug wrote: |
1 - where is the evidence this is happening in terms of internal parts failure?
2 - does anyone have any idea how much force it would actually take to actually whip/flex the transmission enough to damage internal parts by making shaft bearings no longer align momentariy? Hint: more than engine vibrations.
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VW developed the brace for the SA 5-cylinders as a remediation to the problem of the transaxle breaking. Derek Drew has the VW report I think, he has included some photos from the report, on Page 4 of this thread.
Page 4 was also where I first introduced the SA brace to this discussion, then it was re-discovered on Page 12. I first raised the SA brace in 2010 when Mike Ghia was introducing us to Limey. I wanted to know if he was planning to use it, but he did not because it interfered with the fuel tank. It didn't trigger any discussion at that time, not did it when I raised it in the Yahoo group a couple of years prior to that. I am happy to see Jon has found someone to fix him up.
IdahoDoug wrote: |
A brace with the available room of a Syncro like that black one above is not going to do it. In fact, I'm going to get more direct. It's pitifullly and totally useless and here's why. You can flex a part like that more degrees than you can flex the case under it. In other words, the case it is attached to is more rigid than the brace. Does that translate? The brace is so small in cross section and of a softer metal that it will actually flex through more degrees than the much stiffer trans case. Structurally, it is literally as though you are using the trans case to stiffen the little hand made brace.
I hate always being the bearer of bad news, but look it up. You will find that a brace flexes until it reaches its elastic limit and then resists further flex. The aluminum trans case will flex much less in terms of degrees of angle before it reaches its elastic limit because it is a massive cross section structural member of a stiffer material. With that brace attached, the trans can happily flex up and down its limited amount without even bending the softer steel brace to its limit where the brace would then resist further flex. A total and complete waste of time.
DougM |
That is contrary to the real-world experience of the guys in South Africa. I have read of their experiences in the Yahoo SA group, I think it was. They describe a night and day difference, on a Syncro, with that brace shown in the photo Jon has posted.
RonC |
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kgold708 Samba Member
Joined: April 16, 2011 Posts: 186 Location: Genoa IL
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 1:57 pm Post subject: |
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DougM,
You do realize that the factory brace is also far less stiff than the case right? From now on I'm calling it FRV (Flextural Resonate Vibration). I'll say it again, VW put that brace there for a very good reason that I don't fully understand. But I fix stuff that I don't FULLY understand all the time. _________________ ASE Master Tech.
ASE L1 Advanced engine performance specialist.
ASE L2 Advanced electronic diesel engine specialist. |
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gears Samba Member

Joined: October 28, 2002 Posts: 4411 Location: Tamarack, Bend, Kailua
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 2:04 pm Post subject: |
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There's a number of transaxles that could be stuffed into a Syncro, NONE of which offer low G gear and vacuum-locking differential. Betty needs those.
From a "strengthening" standpoint, that brace is worthless. But if it serves as a vibration dampner in any way, it could help. I was envisioning something stiffer, but I applaud any effort, given the lack of space. _________________ aka Pablo, Geary
9.36 @ 146 in '86 Hot & Sticky
'90 Syncro Westy SVX
'87 Syncro GL 2.5
https://guardtransaxle.com |
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Jon_slider Samba Member

Joined: April 11, 2007 Posts: 5091 Location: Santa Cruz, Crowdifornia
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 7:50 pm Post subject: Comic Relief Ahead |
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IdahoDoug wrote: |
Structurally, it is literally as though you are using the trans case to stiffen the little hand made brace. |
I love your descriptive language skills!
So, its not a brace, its a harmonic distortion propagation disruptor:
maybe a guy wire from a sailboat mast, tuned to the correct musical scale, and anchored at the 3 points the SA tuning fork uses, would perform the same function. Since the "TransMast" is so rigid, there may be no need for a bottom guy wire.
Let me summarize some of the possibilities this thread has explored to explain and remedy why Betty destroys trannies so quickly
1. Too much torque, remove the motor
2. Remove the nut at the wheel, or, dont lug the motor
3. Remove the big tires
4. Remove the 5.43 ring and pinion
5. Remove the driveshaft, get a 2 piece unit
6. Remove the solid shaft, use a VC
7. Dont decouple, use a VC at all times
8. The tranny is too hot, add a cooler
9. Its the harmonic distortion of the 5th cylinder, get a tuning fork to dispel the bad vibes
10. use an airbag to stabilize the transaxle, possibly build a bolt on mount for the bag so it becomes a kit-able product
11. Replace the Syncro fuel tank with a fuel cell, so that the original SA tranny brace will fit..
stay "Tuned" for the next episode of "Thats a Red Herring!"
thanks again  _________________ My Soapboxes: Inflation; Handling; Gearing; Decoupling; Swepco
Last edited by Jon_slider on Mon Dec 03, 2012 6:23 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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Phishman068 Samba Member

Joined: February 19, 2007 Posts: 2005 Location: Pittsburgh PA (ish)
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 7:58 pm Post subject: |
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10. Run factory CV's/axles for a while and see if they're breaking. If they're breaking, you've found your problem with your driving style and you can put your stronger ones back on transferring all that unnecessary torque back to the transmission (once fixing your driving style).
I'm glad there's a summary. |
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kgold708 Samba Member
Joined: April 16, 2011 Posts: 186 Location: Genoa IL
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 8:23 pm Post subject: |
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Umm... has anyone mounted an AEL w/the 50deg. Bellhousing?
Edited to add:
11) replace SA bellhousing w/OG 1.6NA 50deg. Housing. Thus moving the primary combustion induced vibrational pattern out of alignment with the dominate local gravitational field.  _________________ ASE Master Tech.
ASE L1 Advanced engine performance specialist.
ASE L2 Advanced electronic diesel engine specialist. |
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D Clymer Samba Member
Joined: December 22, 2005 Posts: 2986 Location: Issaquah, WA
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 9:18 pm Post subject: |
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kgold708 wrote: |
Umm... has anyone mounted an AEL w/the 50deg. Bellhousing?
Edited to add:
11) replace SA bellhousing w/OG 1.6NA 50deg. Housing. Thus moving the primary combustion induced vibrational pattern out of alignment with the dominate local gravitational field.  |
You can't really use a factory 50 degree 4 cylinder bellhousing with a 5 cylinder AEL because the bolt pattern is completely different.
D |
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Jon_slider Samba Member

Joined: April 11, 2007 Posts: 5091 Location: Santa Cruz, Crowdifornia
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 11:07 pm Post subject: |
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Phishman068 wrote: |
Run factory CV's/axles for a while and see if they're breaking. |
Betty has never broken a stock rear axle. She has never had 930 axles and CV's.
She broke an empi rear axle when it was swapped from driver side to passenger side. I dont count that as undue stress related, just ignorance.
Currently the rear CVs are 944's, basically smaller ball stock size CV's with more angle. They are weak, and known to break on other vans. Like Phishman, I consider them a protective fuse.
Her front axles are stock. She did break a front outer CV when a torn boot filled with muddy water. I dont count that as stress related, just poor maintenance. Replaced with stock axle, that has not broken, and has not torn a boot.
Betty has no history of breaking axles while pulling vans out of the sand, nor when doing wheelies going up small obstacles, fully locked.
All her tranny failures have been ridiculously easy to come by, I wish I had at least enjoyed abusing her, if I had known they were coming.
1. tranny fails because it was only filled with 2 quarts.. oops
2. tranny build fails to hold reverse gear, backing down a hill
3. tranny build fails to hold granny gear, driving down a hill
4. tranny low gear inspection cover cracks, when the bolt behind it comes loose inside the case, after driving 5 hours of washboard in death valley, aired down to 24psi, using GW super Foxy shocks.. can you spell vibration?
5. current tranny fails after jerking vans out of sand, and lots of use lugging uphill relying on torque at low rpm. Failure is uniquely different, the pinion bearing fails.
(or the previous granny and reverse failures had bad pinion bearings, that were not replaced, and repeated the symptom.. of crushing granny or reverse, from pinion thrust)
maybe failure 2, 3, and 4 were caused by undue torque pulse vibration, characteristic of 5 cyl motors with no ultrasonic propagation damper..
maybe failure 5 was caused by driver abuse, plus 5 cylinder torque pulses, and compounded by harmonic torque pulse amplification due to the nature of the diesel combustion power signature, emphasized during low rpm, high throttle opening, altitude gains. (lugging uphill on cruise control)
I dont know anyone with 4 cylinder motors, with tires as big as mine, nor anyone with 4 cylinder motors with as much torque as I have and more, that has experienced the number of tranny failures the 5 cylinder AEL's and SA 5cyl motors are known for. I really dont think its the torque, nor the big wheels, thats breaking trannies here. _________________ My Soapboxes: Inflation; Handling; Gearing; Decoupling; Swepco |
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kgold708 Samba Member
Joined: April 16, 2011 Posts: 186 Location: Genoa IL
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Posted: Sat Nov 24, 2012 11:26 pm Post subject: |
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D Clymer wrote: |
kgold708 wrote: |
Umm... has anyone mounted an AEL w/the 50deg. Bellhousing?
Edited to add:
11) replace SA bellhousing w/OG 1.6NA 50deg. Housing. Thus moving the primary combustion induced vibrational pattern out of alignment with the dominate local gravitational field.  |
You can't really use a factory 50 degree 4 cylinder bellhousing with a 5 cylinder AEL because the bolt pattern is completely different.
D |
Thanks, I forgot about that. The 5cyl's were always mounted at a funny angle in everything. Everything except vanagons I guess. _________________ ASE Master Tech.
ASE L1 Advanced engine performance specialist.
ASE L2 Advanced electronic diesel engine specialist. |
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Jon_slider Samba Member

Joined: April 11, 2007 Posts: 5091 Location: Santa Cruz, Crowdifornia
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Posted: Sun Nov 25, 2012 6:32 pm Post subject: |
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point counterpoint
below is an exchange with a 78 year old gentleman that has 34,000 miles on his AEL syncro turning 28" tires, with zero transaxle failures.
===
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/TDI-conversion/message/18999
Jon,
I have 34,000 miles on my AEL (5 cyl) conversion, much of it in the mountains and deserts of the West, with with no T/A problems so far. The stock rear tranny (T/A) was redone with different gearing by Darryl at conversion, and the front end was switched with a partial slip/decoupler rig. I run with the front end disengaged most of the time, unless I need the extra 4WD traction offroad or for weather. Don't know how much difference that will make from stock Syncro.
Just tossing in my experience with another AEL, in a modified Syncro. Hope you come up with the bracing rig you're looking for.
Lou James
===
and later in the thread we compare our setups…
===
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/TDI-conversion/message/19009
Hi Lou
thanks for taking your time to share info, very helpful, I add my info for the
benefit of the group
1. how big are your tires BFG AT 215 70R 16
* mine are MUCH bigger 245x75x16, and I use a 5.43 ring and pinion, instead of
your 4.86
2. at 3000rpm, what is your GPS speed in 4th gear I have checked that with
GPS years ago but can't find my record. I don't have a GPS now and don't know
anyone with one to recheck. If I find one, I'll check it and let you know. The
stock speedo reads about 64 mph @ 3000 rpm in 4th. Using mile markers on an
Interstate, I've calculated that it's reading about 5 % low (about 68 mph
true).
* Im at 70mph@3000rpm
3. what is your EGT at 3000rpm in 4th, flatland (and sea level) At about 62
degrees F. ambient, the EGT averages about 690 degrees F.
* I cruise at 600F
4. what is the maximum EGT, and what minimum RPM do you allow before
downshifting on highway hills I've never pushed the EGT to max. I don't
remember ever pushing it over about 1250 degrees F., and then only momentarily.
I keep it pretty much under 1000 degrees F., as Tom suggested, and I don't use a
fixed rpm for downshifting. I shift down when I see (or hear) the revs dropping
at full throttle unless the crest of the hill is only a very short
distance away. I just don't let it lose revs on hills. I don't lug the
engine. The tach never drops below 1500 rpm.
* I am guilty of letting the motor lose revs on hills. I have been allowing it
to drop to 2000rpm, and I have allowed EGT of 1000.
5. do you drive like an old lady I stay with or ahead of the traffic from
stops most of the time, but I don't pop wheelies
* I also don't do wheelies, and drive like an old lady. I have been extremely
gentle with my beast, but she continues not to be a Beauty. _________________ My Soapboxes: Inflation; Handling; Gearing; Decoupling; Swepco |
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IdahoDoug Samba Member

Joined: June 12, 2010 Posts: 10357 Location: N. Idaho
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Posted: Sun Nov 25, 2012 6:55 pm Post subject: |
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KGgold,
The brace I'm criticizing as ineffective is the small black hand made one, which is NOT a factory brace (someone correct me if I'm wrong here), it won't add stiffness to the case, and it won't act as a harmonic damper any more effectively than a chunk of metal of the same weight/size. Which is very little, and the better place for a chunk of mass for harmonic damping is near the front where the movement would be maximized.
Ron,
As for the SA guys swearing up and down good results. If you were my friend and you were going to run off to a shop and pay someone to build and install that part, I would pull you aside, look in your eyes and kindly say "there is no way that is stiffening the trans case in any meaningful way. Simply no way." Because there are people (maybe some on here right now) who will swear that this reduced trans case flex (with no objective data), I will be polite and not back someone in a corner. It defies the simplest of physics to say a short part made of a softer material is stiffening a huge long part made of a stiffer material that has a very high sympathetic resonance.
The factory brace that is tube-like and goes from the upper bellhousing to the front of the trans on 2WDs is from what I understand the "factory stiffener." This is an excellent design and would help the tranny resist both flexing and vibrating. Unfortunately it will not fit on a syncro. _________________ 1987 2WD Wolfsburg Vanagon Weekender "Mango", two fully locked 80 Series LandCruisers. 2017 Subaru Outback boxer. 1990 Audi 90 Quattro 20V with rear locking differential, 1990 burgundy parts Vanagon. 1984 Porsche 944, 1993 Toyota LandCruiser, 2002 BMW 325iX, 1982 Toyota Sunrader |
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Alaric.H Samba Member

Joined: March 28, 2009 Posts: 2529 Location: Sandy Springs GA
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Posted: Sun Nov 25, 2012 7:13 pm Post subject: |
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Jon_slider wrote: |
point counterpoint
below is an exchange with a 78 year old gentleman that has 34,000 miles on his AEL syncro turning 28" tires, with zero transaxle failures.
===
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/TDI-conversion/message/18999
Jon,
I have 34,000 miles on my AEL (5 cyl) conversion, much of it in the mountains and deserts of the West, with with no T/A problems so far. The stock rear tranny (T/A) was redone with different gearing by Darryl at conversion, and the front end was switched with a partial slip/decoupler rig. I run with the front end disengaged most of the time, unless I need the extra 4WD traction offroad or for weather. Don't know how much difference that will make from stock Syncro.
Just tossing in my experience with another AEL, in a modified Syncro. Hope you come up with the bracing rig you're looking for.
Lou James
===
and later in the thread we compare our setups…
===
http://autos.groups.yahoo.com/group/TDI-conversion/message/19009
Hi Lou
thanks for taking your time to share info, very helpful, I add my info for the
benefit of the group
1. how big are your tires BFG AT 215 70R 16
* mine are MUCH bigger 245x75x16, and I use a 5.43 ring and pinion, instead of
your 4.86
2. at 3000rpm, what is your GPS speed in 4th gear I have checked that with
GPS years ago but can't find my record. I don't have a GPS now and don't know
anyone with one to recheck. If I find one, I'll check it and let you know. The
stock speedo reads about 64 mph @ 3000 rpm in 4th. Using mile markers on an
Interstate, I've calculated that it's reading about 5 % low (about 68 mph
true).
* Im at 70mph@3000rpm
3. what is your EGT at 3000rpm in 4th, flatland (and sea level) At about 62
degrees F. ambient, the EGT averages about 690 degrees F.
* I cruise at 600F
4. what is the maximum EGT, and what minimum RPM do you allow before
downshifting on highway hills I've never pushed the EGT to max. I don't
remember ever pushing it over about 1250 degrees F., and then only momentarily.
I keep it pretty much under 1000 degrees F., as Tom suggested, and I don't use a
fixed rpm for downshifting. I shift down when I see (or hear) the revs dropping
at full throttle unless the crest of the hill is only a very short
distance away. I just don't let it lose revs on hills. I don't lug the
engine. The tach never drops below 1500 rpm.
* I am guilty of letting the motor lose revs on hills. I have been allowing it
to drop to 2000rpm, and I have allowed EGT of 1000.
5. do you drive like an old lady I stay with or ahead of the traffic from
stops most of the time, but I don't pop wheelies
* I also don't do wheelies, and drive like an old lady. I have been extremely
gentle with my beast, but she continues not to be a Beauty. |
You have seen his dyno report. He drives it like a bay window. |
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