
The front diff is super-glued together! I assume I can soak in Acetone and break it down...but would you do it in the first place? Poor man's posi?
yes. Some of the guys locally have been doing this in their slash 4x4s. Its ugly and leads to more problems down the road though...RedScampi wrote:Poor man's posi?
oops, yes, you are correct! My bad.Justjoe wrote: BTW that is a rear diff pulley.
My worry about running a drill into a steel screw that's fastened into magnesium is that it will slip off and gouge the magnesium. Then there's always the possibility of setting it on fire...jwscab wrote:i have a motor mount that also has a broken off screw. I have been searching on the internet about using alum for dissolving steel screws in aluminum but I can't find any information about if the alum attacks magnesium. My bet is it does, so I think I'm stuck just fixturing it best I can and running a 1 or 1.5mm drill down into the screw and hoping for the best.
nice work so far, i have three in a little bit better condition waiting for restoration
RedScampi wrote:Hey guys, thanks for all the replys and encouragement. I've decided to turn this into a build thread. I agree about the satisfaction of bringing these back from the dead. It's more difficult by far than building new. Each piece has it's own special challenge. The Bulldog tires were toast upon arrival unfortunately. They basically fell apart in my hands. This car is rough but it has good bones.Thankfully I have amassed *ALMOST* enough parts to do a reasonable restoration, I think. I need a backbone (for the car!)
The chassis was hammered but I was lucky to find a really nice one on evilbay. The front magnesium bulkhead was broken too, but I have a replacement. I have several plastic front and rear bulkhead covers in varying condition. None perfect but I think I can make one of each work. One of the cover screws is broken off in the rear bulkhead, pretty much flush. Does anyone have an idea of how to get it out? The diff freed up after a day or too of soaking in acetone. I washed it with soap and water then sprayed it out with WD-40.
Here are some current state pictures. This probably will not be a box-stock rebuild. I just want it to be a nice example.Let me know your opinions and any suggestions.
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