The Mav
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so basically what you're saying by saying IWE eliminator will overheat your CV, meaning that when you use 4x4, you will overheat your CV joints..... I highly doubt ford would design their trucks like this....
unless they come with a lack of grease from factory, or ford uses terrible grease, or some weird metals for the balls and bearing cage/hub, or have terrible tolerances between the two, I don't see how they will overheat with mid perch. It's rubber, and metal. all CV joints act the same way. the slight angle from mid perch wont do a damn thing. My borthers Ram has smaller CV's, at as much or slightly more angle than a raptor on mid perch, and its a live axle setup. Never any issues with overheating.
Fear mongering at it's finest. People have been running these eliminators for tens of thousands of miles on mid perch. If live axles weren't used by anyone else and IWE's were the standard way to do IFS 4x4 systems, then sure I could understand the hesitation on doing this. But literally every other 4x4 IFS truck out there these days uses a live axle setup. people level them, lift them, etc and the only time they have issues is when they go beyond the limits. mid perch raptor is nowhere near the limit.
Hell Netix ran IWE eliminators on his truck and he blew his front ring and pinion before he blew his axles. and he was higher than top perch by the time he was done with things. He ended up running RCV axles after a while too and hasnt had any issues with those either. If anyone's a test mule for durability it's him. With 40" tires and abusing the shit out of his truck all the time.
There is absolutely NO LOAD on the axles when you're in 2wd and have a live axle setup. HP/Torque has no effect on things. the axles are free spinning. It's not locked into 4x4. It's just the axles locked to the hubs. They spin freely. nothing dragging them, nothing putting a load on them.
unless they come with a lack of grease from factory, or ford uses terrible grease, or some weird metals for the balls and bearing cage/hub, or have terrible tolerances between the two, I don't see how they will overheat with mid perch. It's rubber, and metal. all CV joints act the same way. the slight angle from mid perch wont do a damn thing. My borthers Ram has smaller CV's, at as much or slightly more angle than a raptor on mid perch, and its a live axle setup. Never any issues with overheating.
Fear mongering at it's finest. People have been running these eliminators for tens of thousands of miles on mid perch. If live axles weren't used by anyone else and IWE's were the standard way to do IFS 4x4 systems, then sure I could understand the hesitation on doing this. But literally every other 4x4 IFS truck out there these days uses a live axle setup. people level them, lift them, etc and the only time they have issues is when they go beyond the limits. mid perch raptor is nowhere near the limit.
Hell Netix ran IWE eliminators on his truck and he blew his front ring and pinion before he blew his axles. and he was higher than top perch by the time he was done with things. He ended up running RCV axles after a while too and hasnt had any issues with those either. If anyone's a test mule for durability it's him. With 40" tires and abusing the shit out of his truck all the time.
There is absolutely NO LOAD on the axles when you're in 2wd and have a live axle setup. HP/Torque has no effect on things. the axles are free spinning. It's not locked into 4x4. It's just the axles locked to the hubs. They spin freely. nothing dragging them, nothing putting a load on them.
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