Yea I made the mistake of going to 4wheelparts
250 for the shop I'm going to
325 for the shop that does way more, but I can't afford.
I trust the first shop
4wheelparts is like car salesman they agressively seach for labor jobs.Yea I made the mistake of going to 4wheelparts
yup.Parts and labor front and rear?
cool! thanks for the input guys. it seems like a decent deal to me, but I wasn't sure.That's what I was quoted for 1 axle just gears and install. No carrier
The main tool most poeple don't use is the inch lb torque wrench, not a clicker you have to have a beam bender or a dial one.
The beam bender ones can be found at some bike shops, needs to read 1 to 35 inch lbs.
That is to set pinion bearing preload. Most people set em way to tight and that can greatly diminish the life of the pinion bearings. At worst it can cause massive heat and kill the gear oil and carrier bearings.
I charge 250 per axle to do gears. If the axles are in the truck. If they are out then 220, if they are 3rd members and you bring me just the third then 200, the 200 also holds true if you bring me just housings with no disassemble on my part needed.
So I basically charge 200 to do gears and about 50 bucks to take apart your axles so I can change them
I have heard guys doing them as low as a 100 bucks or as high as 500 so its quite a range. A mechanics shop who does book rate will probably charge you well over 500 closer to 800, I don't know book rate on all rear ends but the newer Dodges book rate is near 10 hours for some reason.
If you have patients anyone can do gears. If you don't have the tools you can get em really close. Which is fine for most people but I expect my gear setups to last the life of the truck. At min 200k with no problems. So I am very careful with my setups.
Also I have helped a couple guys that set up their own gears that had worked for a long time but their settings were way off.
A bigger axle is more forgiving of a poor setup. If you are setting up a sami axle for a guy running 35s or a toy axle running 40s you better be dead nuts on

cool! thanks for the input guys. it seems like a decent deal to me, but I wasn't sure.
these guys have done a lot of good work for me over the years, but its always good to get some other opinions now and then.
true. if I end up putting it off until this winter, then I may tackle it. just don't want to put the truck out of commission for too long during the summer when I could be playing with it. :POne thing to remember. Every one of these guys here who are experts did one for the first time sometime.
Probably with less help than you would get here.
Ok I am going to need to regear the D60/D80 in my Dodge within the next month and I want to buy the tools to do it right and have access to a neighbors press. I know the inch/lb torque wrench and the dial indicator aren't that expensive, but what else do I need to do it? I have a buddy willing to teach me how to do it. I've looked up the yukon bearing puller on Randy's and its $440 for the one able to do my D80 carrier bearings. Any alternatives?![]()
