Mil T
Full Access Member
Please note that I am not criticizing any thing here. I only speak from experience of having drive shafts built for various vehicles. some with over 36" of travel and some with a lot less to include the Raptor.
With ALL the Raptors that are modified on this forum, there should not be a problem with the OEM shaft in length. There are all sorts of combinations of shocks, springs and adjusted heights with very little reports of oem shafts having issues. Mine lasted 2 years of much abuse off-road with 3+ springs, 3.0 shocks etc. and I only had to replace it because I hit a rock and tweaked it pretty good.
There is a difference in what shafts are made out of and how they are built, such as for screws the shafts should be aluminum because of the length the shaft has to be. Any upgrade in material is a plus. Thickness and material grade are two important ones. The scabs can use a steel shaft because it is shorter. If you are concerned about droop or travel or whatever in that area then have a double cardoon shaft made. No problems with how it articulates because of the way the shaft is made. It's the U-joints that need to be HD also but not to HD. (see last 3 sentences of this post)
The most important thing to do if you are having a new shaft made and you have made any modifications is to make the correct measurements from the correct method. IE. measure from the rubber seal where the slip yoke exits the TC back to the flat surface of the drive shaft flange where the shaft yoke is bolted to connected to the pinion yoke. Do this when the truck is level.
Also, I question the balance of the new shaft at 4000RPM. Mine have all been balanced at 15,000 RPM. Your just spending unnecessary money when buying things like 3000 HP parts for the shaft. You DO want something to break at some point in the system that will not cost an arm and a leg to repair like the rear diff or the transfer case or axles etc. That is why the shaft is a weak point in the first place. Easy to get a new one and you can run without it in emergency.
Mil T
With ALL the Raptors that are modified on this forum, there should not be a problem with the OEM shaft in length. There are all sorts of combinations of shocks, springs and adjusted heights with very little reports of oem shafts having issues. Mine lasted 2 years of much abuse off-road with 3+ springs, 3.0 shocks etc. and I only had to replace it because I hit a rock and tweaked it pretty good.
There is a difference in what shafts are made out of and how they are built, such as for screws the shafts should be aluminum because of the length the shaft has to be. Any upgrade in material is a plus. Thickness and material grade are two important ones. The scabs can use a steel shaft because it is shorter. If you are concerned about droop or travel or whatever in that area then have a double cardoon shaft made. No problems with how it articulates because of the way the shaft is made. It's the U-joints that need to be HD also but not to HD. (see last 3 sentences of this post)
The most important thing to do if you are having a new shaft made and you have made any modifications is to make the correct measurements from the correct method. IE. measure from the rubber seal where the slip yoke exits the TC back to the flat surface of the drive shaft flange where the shaft yoke is bolted to connected to the pinion yoke. Do this when the truck is level.
Also, I question the balance of the new shaft at 4000RPM. Mine have all been balanced at 15,000 RPM. Your just spending unnecessary money when buying things like 3000 HP parts for the shaft. You DO want something to break at some point in the system that will not cost an arm and a leg to repair like the rear diff or the transfer case or axles etc. That is why the shaft is a weak point in the first place. Easy to get a new one and you can run without it in emergency.
Mil T