The sealed bearings in the axles were surprisingly stiff. Soaked overnight in WD40 and they loosed up nicely.
Finally got the Defender back together and ready to go! I've sorted out all the driveline issues and everything is now butter smooth. Made quite a few changes while I was in there.
When I pull the motor, I usually strap it into the battery tray to keep it from flopping around... works like a charm!
Went back to an 11t pinion for now. Wan't happy in the C holes, so I moved it to D. Runs much quieter...
Made a few changes to experiment around. The Defender crawls pretty well as is, but there's always room for improvement (and Jello). While I had the rear axle apart, I dropped in a set of underdrive gears.
Also painted and detailed the rear diff cover. The gray looked a bit too plastic-y for me. Came out pretty nice actually!
Decided to go with a spool up front. For winter driving, going to be leaving the diffs locked most of the time anyway I reckon. I'm thinking that with the front locked and an unlockable rear, I can unlock out back when needed and it will allow the front to pivot somewhat. Especially with the rear being underdriven.
Since I was going to a spool, I could now use the steel axle housing since it didn't play nice with the diff locker thingie. Adds a ton of weight up front...
Finished axle...doesn't look much different aside from the Bronco diff cover, but it's quite chunky. Defender does really good with weight down low - this should help out. Not to mention that with the spool up front, the axle spins SO much more free...all the bearings and the complicated diff lockers really add drag to the axle. I left the servo in for now as I'll probably go back to lockers over the warmer months.
SSD driveshafts came in as well - RPP must have beamed them directly to my house. Always a pleasure doing business with RPP! Anyway, the front rubbed the gearbox terribly. I had to grind away for a while to get clearance
Shafts installed and spinning free!
Got my lights hooked up again. I plugged in the Traxxas ESC and measured the voltage coming out to the light controller since I couldn't find any specs on it. Seems like it's running off straight battery voltage so I soldered in a connector to the battery leads and called it good. May go up in smoke, who knows.
Decided to change up the tires a bit. The mud running really soaked my foams since all my tires are vented. I took the old tires apart and am letting everything dry out. Since this season is lots of snow and mud, I swapped over a set of single stage foams for water resistance and Redcat Irocs for their aggressive tread. Cut a few ribs out of the foams to let the tread flex a bit. Otherwise, they were a perfect fit in the Redcat tires.
Ready for winter! Redcat Iroks look great under there. A bit narrower than my other TSL's.