If i gotta take the pump apart, ill just buy one that bolts on and weld something there.
I've been debating about it on mine. I read if you do weld it on you have to take the pump apart so some of the parts don't get heat warped. I've also read about some people putting red loctite on the tube. I bought a pickup with a bracket/tab that goes under the mounting bolt.
If you want it to never come apart use green loctite, I've made Allen drivers in a pinch before by sticking an Allen bit in a socket with green loctite. Still in one piece and I made it 4 years ago. And that wasn't even a press fit like the pickup tube is
Somebody just mentioned this to me actually. Had had thought that on the hard hits, the rebound would help hold it down for a second, instead of the pogo. But maybe I just need the compression to slow the hit more?
I may try just adding compression first and see how it goes.
It's kind of a big tossup as to what you want to do, I take what you are trying for is more along the lines of whoops and bumps that are somewhat continuous (desert terrain). In general you want very little rebound, a slightly stiffer front than rear so the nose sits up a tad and then tune for the speed you want to drive. Keep in mind that as you tune in one ride aspect another might? take a bit of a hit and you'll loose some ride quality or handling.
If you want to do more short course type stuff where it's one big jump and no real whoops or repetitive bumps then lots of rebound holds the vehicle down on landing and lets it rise up to ride height in a controlled manner. Again those trucks don't see much in the way of whoops and bigger hits one after the other.
Spend some time watching Trophy trucks and short course trucks and you will see what I'm talking about. You'r going to be into your shocks multiple times but I suggest a BIG change the first time to see what the other side of wrong is like then back off as you see fit.
After watching that I would add compression valving and maybe a touch of rebound. And sway bars, really stiff sway bars.The thing is literally like driving a boat on water.
I have to "pre turn" the wheels while the thing is weightless, so that when the weight comes down, it can react. Its super sketchy but Ive actually gotten used to it haha.
I was doing 60 at the little "hop"
If you want it to never come apart use green loctite, I've made Allen drivers in a pinch before by sticking an Allen bit in a socket with green loctite. Still in one piece and I made it 4 years ago. And that wasn't even a press fit like the pickup tube is
I think this is the stuff 78K30 might be referring to: https://www.amazon.com/Loctite-442-...coding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=NFZ556P5SMSD0FEVHCBGI definitely want it to stay in this time!
Side note. This is a great reason to run an aluminum oil pan imo. If it was steel, I would have just kept running it and never known and burnt up the motor....

Do you watch your oil pressure gauge?![]()
I too, am confused by this comment. Do steel pans not leak when cracked in Michigan?
Religiously. You guys realize the pump sits down in the pan pretty far right?
I doubt it would have cracked. It would have just dented...

So...what would have been the problem with a dented pan? And how would you have burnt up the motor if you always maintained oil pressure?![]()