by glfredrick » Thu Sep 23, 2010 3:35 pm
We do it all the time, and I'm planning on welding the rear of my Ranger truggy at first (until I can spring for an ARB and 3 spline axles).
On the street, you will drag one tire around corners, as the slower wheel can't release as the vehicle makes the turn. Something has to give, and it is the tire. On slippery conditions, while you have double the traction, you also have no way to halt side-slipping, which is rather disconcerting in snow and traffic. In an open rear axle (spider gears work correctly) one tire will always be there as an anchor, just rolling along, holding the vehicle somewhat straight. That is taken away when they both spin all the time.
Oh, and of course, it is harder on the axles. I've seen them twist off during hard acceleration around corners if one tire doesn't skid.
If another axle is in the plans and you need instant traction, give it a shot. If you need to run that axle, don't. It would be ruined for repairs and need, at least, a new carrier plus all the internals to bring it back to stock condition.
Weld the spiders by first carefully cleaning any axle grease, drying well, then pre-heat to just under dull red with a torch. Weld with high nickle rods or good wire in a MIG. Clear out all the slag so it doesn't get between other gear surfaces. You can weld the entire carrier into a lump or just weld the spiders together so they remain removable (good luck with that...). Don't even mess with what is called a "fozzy locker" where you weld a lump between the teeth of the side gears so they can rotate a bit before hitting the lump. That is the ultimate in stupidity because moving just a bit is worthless in the carrier, and anything that moves will slam and break faster. Either make them solid or don't weld.
http://www.UCORA.org == The United Christian Off-Road Alliance, a family friendly place
2003 Trailblazer = got groceries?
1995 Dodge RAM 2500 w/Cummins = got tow rig?
1986-90 Ford Ranger truggy = got rock?