I am in Southern CaliforniaWhere are you located?
I have the merchant automotive version.
Thanks!Moved to Tool Crib.
Good luck.
I would be fine with that, I’ll try and look closer when I’m in there to see if it’s leaking. I would just hate for it to start leaking shortly after I was in there.If it’s not leaking leave it alone. You’re liable to make it worse
I am in Southern California
Thanks!
I would be fine with that, I’ll try and look closer when I’m in there to see if it’s leaking. I would just hate for it to start leaking shortly after I was in there.
What’s the opportunity to make it worse? I think I remember reading about there’s a cover plate on the rear that’s a pain to line up?
Keep in mind, the flexplate can't just be popped off to take a close look at the rear main seal without buying new torque to yield bolts or some ARP's. To get either the stockers or the ARP's tight will require the flexplate holding tool which goes through the starter hole and indexes in the teeth to hold the flexplate from rotating.
I can't remember the torque value on my ARP's, but I do remember hanging on the torque wrench when I put on my SoCal flex plate.
Won’t I be changing out the flex plate anyways with the southbend kit I get?Keep in mind, the flexplate can't just be popped off to take a close look at the rear main seal without buying new torque to yield bolts or some ARP's. To get either the stockers or the ARP's tight will require the flexplate holding tool which goes through the starter hole and indexes in the teeth to hold the flexplate from rotating.
I can't remember the torque value on my ARP's, but I do remember hanging on the torque wrench when I put on my SoCal flex plate.
I’m all good for not risking it :thumb:50/50 chance it leaks worse after you’re done if you don’t know what you’re doing. I know what I’m doing and don’t change them unless it’s leaking bad.
you can retorque the stock flex plate bolts 3-4 times before they no long hold the correct torque. Guy did testing on them a few years back with main bolts, flex plate bolts and the stock balancer bolt. certainly aint a bad idea to replace them if you wanted to.
you can retorque the stock flex plate bolts 3-4 times before they no long hold the correct torque. Guy did testing on them a few years back with main bolts, flex plate bolts and the stock balancer bolt. certainly aint a bad idea to replace them if you wanted to.
I do know when I did mine I could not get the last 60deg turn on it, it did not matter how big a cheater I got(4') on 3/4" drive breaker bar. This was before mine brain processed the torque to yield and bought new ones. The new ones I got the last 60 deg no problem. Mine could have been re-torqued or over torqued prior to me(got the truck with 200K on the clock).
Mike