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went down to the local bike shop with my shifter in hand lookin for some sort of cable crimp.

this is what they gave me, it ended up fitting the lever and wire perfect.
it was off of a dropper post, which is actually where my cable came from.


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and now its fully functional.

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more into the tcase

 

way back in 2014, the ring gear in the doubler spit out in a very sketchy spot
both of my winches, plus two more and 8 people helped spin the truck around and safely down to a flat where I was able to swap tcases the next day

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ended up having  to split a case in half to get a new ring gear donor.
the way the doubler is built didnt allow for a retainer, or so it was lead to believe. 
put the new ring in, stake in in place good to go.

fast forward to now.
the ring started walking again! so in went the proper retainer and I started grinding

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hear me out, before anyone says it. 

Literally no idea why i didnt line the tangs up to one of the studs, thought about it the entire process... especially on the last hole lmao

but here it is, it even retained its springtivity

was cleaned afterwards to install the new bearing


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ran an idea past a buddy and he said come on down.

3 planet carriers are out of style

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but 6 planets on the other hand....
thats more like it!


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3 vs 6

 

 

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starting to assemble

 

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lets stand all of those bearing back up

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the graveyard, 3 carriers due to one being roasted, the other was already parts from when the ring gear ejected in '14 but made for good bearing slugs. and the third had good junk

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final planet
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and all together again
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  • 1 month later...
On 6/10/2025 at 5:14 PM, A-man930 said:

You've taken a three planet carrier and machined it to accept six? You're my hero. Totally doing this.

 

for the cost of a new 6 pinion carrier it would have been just as easy to buy one, but I have alot of free time and it was a fun challenge. most tedious part was putting all the needle bearings in, which after the first two I had a pretty good rhythm. the easiest way would have been to keep the slug in the entire time and not let them fall out in the first place. 

took about three weeks for the grade BD threaded rod to show up, thanks to my homie who machined the carrier. his work had an account with mc master carr which actually had stock of this. no where in canada that I called had it or even knew it existed. 


Such a big tube for a single threaded rod!
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all trimmed down and installed
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I have a collection of gaskets from various rebuild kits so I decided to use them  since the mating surface on the doubler have seen some abuse ( it may have been dropped once or twice over the years)

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since the studs go straight through the doubler it tends to seep fluid through them so my fix involves using copper crush washers under the nuts

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finally it is all together, yes it gets messy in my garage very fast lmao

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waiting on the undercoat my neighbor promised he was ordering (which was over a month by the way, and I ended up finding someone else in the end who was actually had a wurth account to order it, which took another two weeks) I decided to tear the into the winches. one I 100% over greased, and used an aviation grease which didn't last long, it dried right up and caused alot of drag during free spool

the Warn 9000XDI
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it took a long time to scoop all of the dry grease out, before using solvents to clean the rest
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found this piled behind the pinion gear which was pushing the planets up
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breaking open the warn vr 8000, which has lived its entire life upside down under the box of the truck.

you can tell it has been underwater once or twice
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it did clean up though! wire wheel and solvents and it turn out decent, not new but still useable, looks night and day better than when i cracked it open.
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will be getting the casings media blasted and powder coated to deal with the aluminum corrosion prior to reassembly

ordered a new horn button/cap retainer assembly. the spring loaded  pin did not fit so I am wondering if I put the non tilt turn signal cam in. so I will have to dig a little deeper into that or figure out something else to get it to work

the previous one had a wire soldered onto the cap itself and for the life of me I can't find any of the spring loaded bits from the three steering columns I took apart
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my brake proportioning valve (left) vs stock (right)

no load sensing valve required in the rear
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and finally! the day has come, the undercoat arrived

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so time to strip the truck down and rip the axles out to start prepping the paint for undercoat
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more to come, will scrub everything down, undercoat and then work on brake/fuel lines.



also, A-Man thank you for taking interest in my build. there's only one other person out the twelve years of having this thread who has beat you in posts and that is Pete himself. You Pete and and Neohic have proven that there is actual interest in the stuff i post. so thank you again!   image.png.ab7daa327e8612da465d69113b4f2042.png






here is a pic of a cj-3a my friend is finishing for a customer, which i had the pleasure of seeing while  gearing some axles for his own rig

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2 hours ago, MancheKid86 said:

… A-Man thank you for taking interest in my build. there's only one other person out the twelve years of having this thread who has beat you in posts and that is Pete himself. You Pete and and Neohic have proven that there is actual interest in the stuff i post. so thank you again!   image.png.ab7daa327e8612da465d69113b4f2042.png


In it for the long haul!! :nutherround: Thanks for the updates!

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I have heard that rubberized undercoating is not a good route, as it can trap moisture underneath and cause worse rust. Any thoughts on that?  I'm by no means an expert. That's why I ask. 

 

Ps. I don't post a lot but also don't miss ANY content on CC. :popcorn:

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On 8/7/2025 at 1:55 PM, watchamakalit said:

I have heard that rubberized undercoating is not a good route, as it can trap moisture underneath and cause worse rust. Any thoughts on that?  I'm by no means an expert. That's why I ask. 

 

Ps. I don't post a lot but also don't miss ANY content on CC. :popcorn:


now some people may not agree with what I am about to say. every ones experience is different. it depends on your location (rust belt, living next to bodies of salt water like oceans) road conditions (if they are heavily salted)

 undercoat is a very controversial topic. depending on where you read online its either a yay or nay. I believe there are a few factors that ultimately dictate the overall outcome.
condition of the vehicle,  if its brand new. Or if it is already seen road use/rusted/dirt salt trapped in it.
the composition of the undercoat itself ie. oil based, bitumen (asphalt) or rubberized
the prep work (removing all grease, salts, debris ect) or lack of prep

oil seems to be the go to nowadays because it extremely easy to apply with very little to zero prep and as you know oil repels water and blocks out any oxygen (aka oxidation) but it too has its drawbacks. if not properly maintained ie. washing your vehicle regularly, and not just the exterior paint, underneath as well. it can build up dust and salt just as easily since it creates a sticky surface. when the dust builds up that in turn wicks in moisture. as long as you are diligent and do thorough job of cleaning it there shouldn't be an issue. granted you need to annually re apply the oil. if you use detergents while washing it will overtime wash away the coating

rubberized is 100% a no go, as it generally bubbles and creates air pockets during the application, and overtime it shrinks and cracks causes it to debond from the surface. Allowing moisture, salts, dirt ect in causing this state of rapid decay seen on the internet.

 Bitumen depending on the manufacturer and additives that compose it (the type I went with) isn't perfect either but doesn't shrink/crack and if applied in the correct thickness does a great job. every comanche I have owned/parted out (10 of them) has had the bitumen underseal from factory. now I am not saying that It cannot cause rot but if applied correctly then it does its intended job. granted if I lived in an area that uses salt has high humidity  and bodies of salt water. it probably would be a completely different scenario

Wurth underbody sealant (german made product) AFAIK is used on all the Porsches on the road

#1 issue I see causing adverse affects is application thickness. A coating of ~1-2 mm MAX is adequate and does its intended purpose. any more than that and it is too thick. the misconception is thinking you want to drown the metal in it, in this circumstance less is more protection and more is less protection

another misconception is that you can annually add another layer of bitumen underseal, this is a big no. you are effectively sealing in a years worth of road grime, dirt and hidden moisture. if there is any debonding chips ect it will be sealed in. causing the rot to start. the proper way which you will not find suggested online is to remove ALL old underseal, address any areas with the converter of your choice. and start fresh with that 1-2 mm coating. adding layer after layer is just negligent and promotes instead of inhibits. shops don't care and will gladly do it because they are getting paid and its not their vehicle.  

most important thing you can do is clean your vehicle regularly especially in the rustbelt/high salt areas. as stated earlier not just the visible body panels but ensure you wash underneath in all the nooks and crannies that can house dirt and salt. if you are diligent and take the time to clean your vehicle, it will last a very long time. its just like someone who brushes and flosses daily versus someone with poor oral hygiene who doesn't take the time to brush and floss. ones going to have cavities/missing teeth and the other one generally won't unless they have some underlying health/genetic issues. or another good example if your a hunter/marksman and shoot corrosive ammo you best bet you are meticulously cleaning everything after an outing/day at the range otherwise your barrel ect is going to start to rot

going out to my base model 2wd comanche (which I 4wd ax-15 swapped) that still has its factory undercoat. it is mint underneath. as stated previously its undercoat thickness is 1-2 mm at most. the only rust on it is from moisture trapped in the factory carpets padding in the drivers footwell from leaking window seals/lack of floor mats allowing snowy muddy boots to drain directly into the floor. also stone chips on the exterior paint that I never dealt with and allowed dirt and salt to fester without washing/reapplying paint to the bare steel for extended periods of time.


sorry for the long winded explanation. but that is my take on the matter.






here are some pictures of my unibody after thoroughly cleaning it with Por-15 degrease in prep of applying a 1-2 mm coating of underbody sealant.
it has been professionally media blasted twice, etched and coated with Endura industrial grade epoxy

 

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after drilling a 1.5" hole for the fuel sender wiring in the drivers floorpan I masked it all off, and went to town. it went on like paint. after reading the spreadsheet it called 500 microns/0.5mm. so that's what it ended up getting.

some ripples from being too close or not properly fanning the spray but overall pleased with the results. did not do the top of the rear "frame". still contemplating it. but I don't see the need as the box covers it and there shouldn't be any high velocity stones making contact with its surface. did the sliders and rear bumper as well because why not, it is non-paintable so I can always hit it with some gun wash and it will come right off if I ever want to touch up the sliders/bumper with some rattle can after rubbing on rocks and trees.

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and all unmasked, did the inside of the fenders as well since I am not running any inner wheel well liners. (they tend to just get torn off when a big stick/log works its way though the wheel well anyways)


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wish I could figure out how to get the site to not resize the pictures to the size of a large tumbnail since I'm no where near the max upload limit per post

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ordered some new bumpstops for the ol' elliptical setup

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went down to the local fastener store and picked up majority of the hardware I need to start the reassembly

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alot of the mods in the rear are almost as old as I am, including the elliptical suspension.
looking at the quality of welds and that they have lasted for 30 years makes me think they can't be that bad lmao
so with that being said, I started adding the new hardware.
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 I even spaced out either side of the rear shackles with washers this go around instead of just giving them the ugga duggas until they conformed.
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speaking of rubberized undercoat, I ended up going over to help my neighbor switch his rotisserie around on the new car they have in the shop to restore. @watchamakalit this is exactly why the internet says not to use rubberized. especially if its sprayed overtop of rust. pictures don't do it justice, the thing is rotten and plagued with halfassed repairs. who ever "restored" it previously scabbed some patch panels on and just put lipstick on the pig. they are bringing it down to the local sandblasting outfit, I think there will just be the outer skins remaining afterwards :laugh:

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