Got the ARB installed in the rear axle today. Gear setups are out of my league but my buddy Nate has done several so we struck a deal. He helped me with the install and He got the carrier and Detroit we removed to replace his Gov-Loc.
Once we reached the stage to check the current backlash, we discovered something wasn't quite right. There were a couple of spots where things didn't spin smoothly. It took a bit of extra force to spin the gears. We pulled the carrier and figured out it was the pinion not spinning smoothly. When we pulled the pinion out we could see some odd wear on one of the races. I'm speculating it was damage due to the driveshaft escapade back in November.
So we ended up doing a complete overhaul of the diff. Luckily I ordered a full kit. I was going to just by new carrier bearings and races but it was only $20 more to get a kit that included pinion bearings, crush sleeve, oil seal, pinion nut, pinion support shims, etc. Even ring gear bolts.
One of the things the ARB instructions tell you is that the carrier may not clear the housing and to check it with a 1/16" feeler gauge. The ribs at both bearing cap bolts were a problem. Picture only shows the top one:
You couldn't tell there was a problem when spinning the carrier, but it was as close as you could get without actually touching. So we ground the ribs down:
Here's the locker all installed, gears set up, and ready for the cover.
The ARB sure is nice looking. Makes the factory carrier look clunky.
I really like the Crane covers so I purchased one for rear to match the front cover I put on last year.
I decided to keep it green. Kinda like it.
I still need to connect the air line to the manifold/solenoid. And wire a switch to the solenoid. I think I will probably move the manifold from the front fender to somewhere under the cab to split the distance between axles.
Was definitely different driving home. No clunk in the rear when putting it in drive. No tire chirp accelerating thru the left turn onto the highway. No sway in the rear when getting on the throttle after coasting.