Hello, I have a 95 caprice that came with the 4.3 and a 7.5 rear end. I now have the 5.7 engine and I want to upgrade my rear end to the 8.5. Which cars or trucks besides the impala ss can i get the rear end from?
That's to remind you that you need the driveshaft too, your L99 driveshaft is a smidge too long.Hello, I have a 95 caprice that came with the 4.3L and a 7.625" rear end. I now have the 5.7L and I want to upgrade my rear end
and driveshaft
to the 8.5". Which cars or trucks besides the impala ss can i get the rear end
and driveshaft
from?
As far as the difference in wagon vs sedan housing, the significant differences are as follows:
Axle shaft diameter (at the wheel bearing):
Sedan 1.4"
Wagon 1.6"
Wheel bearing:
Wagon is significantly larger, both ID (as indicated above) & OD of finished tube end - 2.850" vs 2.535"
Axle housing brake backing plate flange:
patterns are similar (trapezoid), but wagon is larger (spacing between bolts) and flange bolts are 7/16" vs 3/8" for sedan
Lower control arm bracket center-to center distance: (measure from "oval" on back of bracket)
Sedan 47"
Wagon 49"
Spring perch position:
Wagon lower spring mounts are further apart than sedan, do not align with upper spring pockets in rear frame crossmember--resulting in canted springs
Housing tube diameter at backing plate flange (at weld):
2.887" vs 2.535"
If you want disk brakes only the SS and 9C1 have them. The 9C1 is narrow and may be a bad choice for large tires.does the steath bolt method still apply?
Marky Dissod said:
"
roughly-hundred of sedan axles I've personally witnessed taxi depot mechanics advise their bosses that they should not install onto wagons, before reluctantly installing them onto wagons as directed by their bosses who chose to ignore the advice
I still feel very strongly about the disappearance of the Impala SS Tech Section.I thought posting Navy Lifer's documented dimensions, then highlighting the problem ones in RED would be enough.(Post#7)
If nobody has noticed the OP has not logged onto the site since post #6.
Other participants in this thread might ask themselves if this is a case of "trolling" as the stickies on this forum, carparts dot com or a local used parts seller would give the same answer: for a unmodified direct swap sedan axles and wagon axles are considered different by GM.
Forum members may want to consider advice to new members. Some people may not have the skills to modify parts. Not every one had decades of knowledge and know what questions to ask.
As usual forum members have posted some great information and pictures that may attract a future search engine to good information.
Hi Caddylack, there seems to be a lot of guys in your area with parts I’m interested in. Let me do some research on the fleetwood axle and see what I come up with.Welcome to the forum!
I don't have the measurements in front of me, but I can tell you that there is a very good chance that the flange bolt pattern is the same. GM has a tendency to do that, especially back in the day.
If I were you, i would be more concerned with making sure that the axle will physically bolt up to the suspension on your Olds. If any fabrication is required, then that will be a bigger obstacle than the caliper brackets.
I have two Fleetwood axles, and I only need one of them. It's the same as the wagon axle, but narrower. If you determine that it would work for you, I could sell you an axle for cheap. I'm located in northern Illinois.
Thank you Caddylac & 95wagon for the swift replies. I’m in Houston 77429 area code. I’ve used Fastenal store to store pallet shipping in the past for large items such as rear ends. Hoping if a proper rear can be sourced the seller is in proximity to a Fastenal store. I don’t think they are in all states yet.Could be worse, you could trying to buy parts for a W27
I should be able to get you most of the pertinent numbers you are looking for.
I was quite involved with a rear disc setup ( a few actually) involving the wagon housing which has that housing flange pattern.
edit to answer Caddylack, that flange spacing I think you will find is wagon specific in our years. ( discounting Limo which I have no first hand info)
The accessible housing with the stock standoff dia ( your #5 in dia) is at home so I cant get that number till later.
Where are you located?
Yep, I caught myself!edit to answer Caddylack, that flange spacing I think you will find is wagon specific in our years. ( discounting Limo which I have no first hand info)
Definitely check out my edit regarding the commercial Fleetwood.Ultimately, I am hoping to find something with a 3.42 posi and matching axle flanges which sounds like a wagon.
If I did strictly track I would think I could run c eliminators but I still want to drive the car. Cake and eat it too I guess.The limo diff is stronger with stock 33 but still a C lock.
Sounds like your having a good time. I’ve also considered flange swaps but the rabbit hole gets pretty deep. I’m not sure if a perfect happy medium exists. It’s always give and take with this stuff. Some of the Olds guys are telling me there’s a wagon (maybe hurse/limo) rear end with bolt in axles (non c), same flange dimensions pictured above (post #22), 9-3/8” ring with a stock 3.42 posi. Where that exists I have no idea.All that said, the weak point is the stock axles, I am at 4500 pounds , a stick, 13.7 overall first gear.
On slicks, they twist , but the rest of the diff is pretty stout.
This why I am moving to 33
Thank you I appreciate the well wishes. I usually ask for forgiveness and not permission but with the birth of my son I’m trying to change my ways. I’m funneling a good portion of what use to be “fun money” into a savings account for my sons college fund.Congratulations! Hopefully everyone is doing well and recovering. The time/money balance is an interesting thing to observe as life goes on - everyone does it differently.
The CTS-V also has like a 4,800lb curb weight. There are heavily modified examples locally putting down north of 1k hp and holding together. That’s also why I went with the CTS-V Brembo 6 piston/4 piston brake setup. If they’ll stop 4,800 lbs they should work for my 4,200lb sled. That’s curb weight with 455. I’m thinking I’ve lost a few pounds with the LS.Well, first let me restate that I am speaking anecdotally here. I'm certainly not a drivetrain expert. BUT...
There are tons of guys on the TBSS forum running 1000+ whp boosted LSX's with the factory 9.5" 14-bolt. I did hear about a guy who broke something at 1200 whp, but I don't think it's fair to say that you will kill a 14-bolt with this kind of power. All these guys have slicks and built suspension, and the TBSS weighs like 4700 lbs or something.
This matches my current flangeNear as I can measure .439 bolt holes 7/16 shank bolts as a close fit
I've also got the 7/16" shoulder boltsThe car uses SAE shoulder bolts as the hole in the backing plate is larger than
the housing register. Not much but enough it doesn't center the backing plate.
These figures seem to be within margin of error to match my flange hole spacingNear as I can measure right now I am seeing
3.771 across the top centers
2.991 across the bottom center
2.481 top to bottom centers
The axle is still in and these numbers may be skewed.
My CAD file shows 2.508", likely within margin of error2.481 top to bottom centers
This one I am a bit confused on. Are you saying that is figure 5 on the below drawing? If so that would be incorrect axle offset.2.415 looks to be front of backing plate flange to outside of axle
flange. ( Bill has stated 2.375 in some emails)
That was derived from back of flange to back of flange
2.337 minus housing flange - .290 plus shaft
flange + .368 = 2.415
F U B, Save the hearse (coach) and you may want to consider this. Moser Engineering - Ford 9" Rear End - Complete - 1977-1996 GM B-Body: Impala, Caprice, etc.
It's just an idea you may not have considered.
Mark: Snowman-33