fratzog lover
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Don Garlits early Swamp Rat dragsters...had 8.75 rears. Blower, sticky slicks and all.
While I agree the Dana is beefier than the 8.75.. But an awful lot of 8.75's lived behind 440's swapped into 383 4spd cars.... An 8.75 will take more abuse than a GM 12 bolt, more abuse than most stock Ford 9" rears... If you got your 9" with the 31 spline axles & the four pinion track-lok then you got a good one but most 9" axles need allot of parts to make them take the abuse that they are known for...
8 3/4 was the only rear available in a max wedge powered 62-64 MoparWhat rear end was in the Max Wedge cars.
I also hear about how bad the ball & trunnion driveshaft is, but they were used and abused as well by max wedge cars and hemis.I asked Bill Jenkins (Grumpy) about the '64 rear ends and how they held up behind the 426 Hemis. He replied with a gravel voice, "Well you broke an axle once in awhile, then you changed it." He would know!
Anything and everything will eventually be broken.The 3.91 gear-set pinions weren't all that strong either, for some years the factory didn't even fix them if they broke under warranty, they replaced them with a 4.10 Dana.
Anything and everything will eventually be broken.
2 buddy's at the track last year **** out Dana 60 gears.
No it turned into a wallet measuring contestYeah but... were they under warranty?
No it turned into a wallet measuring contest
Still remember the day, on the polara. It was violent enough that it literally blew the distributor cap off. Figure that one out.Just think how much quicker the 8 3/4’s would have given up the ghost.
The Dana may have been overkill for the street on 60’s tire technology. But as soon as you put on slicks something had to give. The 9 3/4” ring gear in the Dana distributed the shock load over a greater distance on the contact pattern. I’ve seen quite a few 8 3/4 ring gears with teeth missing, or chipped that were in race cars or healthy street engines on modern tires. The Dana is added insurance, if you want to bang the gears. I’m surprised they put the 8 3/4 behind the ‘68 BO and LO SS cars with automatic. They were probably all changed out in time. I do agree that in a street application, with tires that give the 8 3/4 would be fine. I beat the crap out of my Charger with the Dana, and it’s never been apart.
As I said earlier yes the Dana is beefier, no one is challenging that.. But the 8.75 is tougher that many folk give it credit for....
Are you familiar with the guy who goes by the screen name "Thumper" ? He builds custom carbs for allot of fast cars... His Dart has been well into the 9's for at least ten years now & was running low 10's for years before that... Still running his 8.75...
There are plenty of 10-11 second cars running 8.75's... It's not just slicks, you can run slicks, Thumper does... Slicks & a manual trans, you might get away with it if the car is light, heavy car forget about it....
If your running a stick & dump the clutch at 4K+ thats a huge shock load, If the tires don't spin the load is obviously greater... If the axle doesn't break than the driveshaft might, or the transmission, or the engine mounts, or the axle mounts, or the wheel studs... Your gonna find the weakest link... Thats racing ...
Remember that earlier comment of mine about Ford 9" not being all that tough? Well here is one of the common failures...
View attachment 1226707
Another...
View attachment 1226710
The one I was hoping to find but didn't is the failure of the pinion support... There's a reason Ford made the "Daytona" pinion support.... And Nodular cases, and bigger axles, and improved housings...
The Dana 60 rarely breaks but it was designed to live in a 1 ton truck so it's huge and it's heavy... Depends on a lot of variables but same width, same brakes, no tricks the Dana is about 45 lbs heavier than the 8.75...
But the thing I see as a bigger advantage of the 8.75 is the ability to swap 3rd members in about an hour...
A gear change on a Dana is a undertaking.. On an 8.75 when I was younger I could swap it out in 35-40 minutes & I would just for a weekend of fun, whether it was throwing in 3.91's for racing or throwing it a 2.76 one legger for a freeway cruise....
Don Garlits early Swamp Rat dragsters...had 8.75 rears. Blower, sticky slicks and all.
I also hear about how bad the ball & trunnion driveshaft is, but they were used and abused as well by max wedge cars and hemis.
I've never heard of one failing, but I never had the pleasure to ask any old school drivers like Jenkins, by any chance did you?
My 64 has both the b&t and tapered axles, it's no ground pounding big hp racecar, but I have complete confidence in both, and they are untouched original.