Pinion Seal

Maintenance advice to keep your Spider in shape.
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seabeelt
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Your car is a: Fiat Spider - 1971 BS1
Location: Tiverton, RI

Pinion Seal

Post by seabeelt »

Decided to tackle this leaking problem this weekend. Got the car up on jack stands ( gotta love the quick pump floor jack) :D Found all kinds of good stuff once under there. Scary part was that 2 out of the 4 nuts attaching the drive shaft to the rear diff were loose :shock: and the other 2 were not all that tight either. So drive shaft came off fairly easily. Used a couple of zip ties to remember where it went when mated to the rear end. Impact gun was great for getting the pinion nut off after I marked its position. The old seal was a bugger to get out. Tapped the new one in slow but sure, put everything back together, drained about a half pint maybe more of old fluid out - black as crude oil. Refilled with 80-90w. Removed about a half pound of greasy crud from the diff and cleaned it off with brake cleaner.

Noticed that the center support bearing seemed to wobble all around in the rubber covering. Not sure what is really in there at this point and why the drive shaft does not wobble all around while driving??????.?. :? :shock: no noise, nothing, but I'm pretty sure it shouldn't have over an inch of play in every direction, definitely the next project.

Noticed exhaust has a small hole just after the resonator :( and is under the the e-brake cable instead of over it causing the exhaust to ride low and bump the pan hard rod. Most of the rubber exhaust hangers are shot and not helping much. And of course the exhaust has melted the ebrake cable covering

All the bushings for the long and short trailing arms are definitely shot- thank goodness for spares and projects to do.
Michael and Deborah Williamson
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
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4uall
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Your car is a: 1980 Fiat Pininfarina Spider 2000 F.I.
Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada

Re: Pinion Seal

Post by 4uall »

here is an awesome video as well :wink:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ha2Uhl9BTtM
Jay

Fiona
1980 FI 2000 Spider
ITZEBTZE

https://goo.gl/photos/eNKaX7hrXhBu9fmp6

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2014 Jeep Wrangler Sport
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seabeelt
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Your car is a: Fiat Spider - 1971 BS1
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by seabeelt »

Thanks Jay. I actually saw that one a couple months ago. Didn't need his "special" tool to lock up the real end. E-brake did just fine along with the impact gun. Wish he had published a few more items on the Fiat though.
R/
Michael and Deborah Williamson
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
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4uall
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Your car is a: 1980 Fiat Pininfarina Spider 2000 F.I.
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by 4uall »

I hear ya :wink:
Jay

Fiona
1980 FI 2000 Spider
ITZEBTZE

https://goo.gl/photos/eNKaX7hrXhBu9fmp6

FINN (FN-2187)
2014 Jeep Wrangler Sport
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KidDingo
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Your car is a: 1981 Fiat Spider 2000 FI 5-spd
Location: Edmonton, AB, Canada

Re: Pinion Seal

Post by KidDingo »

That's a coincidence. I just did the same thing. Only, I had to install a rebuilt driveshaft, too. With a gammy shoulder. Wasn't easy, but definitely feel better knowing there won't be any diff oil flinging around under the car and that the diff won't seize up.

BTW, new u-joints, pillow block, and guibo make a BIG difference in the driving experinece.
_______________________________________________
Michael
1981 Fiat Spider 2000 FI
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4uall
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Your car is a: 1980 Fiat Pininfarina Spider 2000 F.I.
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by 4uall »

uhm :oops: looks like I may need to do the same soon :shock:

Image

Image
Jay

Fiona
1980 FI 2000 Spider
ITZEBTZE

https://goo.gl/photos/eNKaX7hrXhBu9fmp6

FINN (FN-2187)
2014 Jeep Wrangler Sport
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seabeelt
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by seabeelt »

I would say that is a definite yes. Car will go faster once All the dirt caked oil is remove too :D
Michael and Deborah Williamson
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
njoconnor
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Your car is a: 1972 124 Spider

Re: Pinion Seal

Post by njoconnor »

+1 on the YES vote on your diff, Jay. Looks like mine used to :)

Since I was redoing the whole suspension, it made sense to work on my pinion seal and clean/paint the diff with everything off the car. Thinking on the steps, it would be harder on the car than off. Alan (SoFlaFiat) email talked me through the rear axle drop process, and it's really not bad. Instead of using the e-brake to lock the axle, I used quick clamps (padded) to lock the (old) brake discs. Just remember to tighten ANY connection anywhere near the axle (like brake center flex hoses... :oops: ).

Once replaced, you realize how nice it is not to see axle fluid on the garage floor....or the drive. Can't say the 72 is faster with less crud, but I still get a kick looking under there and seeing paint. Fall to it; it's worth the effort.

Neil
Neil O'Connor
Madison, WI
72 FIAT 124 Spider
12 Jeep Grand Cherokee Overland Summit
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and a host of Audi's, Saabs, VW's, MOPAR's, Fords, and a Bimmer....
fiatfactory
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by fiatfactory »

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Last edited by fiatfactory on Tue Jul 02, 2019 6:31 am, edited 1 time in total.
nothing to see here... move along.
DieselSpider
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Your car is a: 1978 124 Spider with Isuzu Turbo Diesel

Re: Pinion Seal

Post by DieselSpider »

fiatfactory wrote:As a factory trained mechanic, I fail to see how you all think that this is going to be a suitable solution?

Pre-load on the pinion bearings, as well as the lash between the pinion and crown wheel teeth (determined by the meshing pattern) has a pretty definite factory procedure for doing ... and ensuring that pre-load and lash is actually correct...not just a GUESS, which is all you get with the "mark and return the nut to the same position" method.

Every single time I have replaced a broken differential a tale about how the pinion seal was 'recently' replaced comes out in the wash.... "caveat emptor" for anyone following the non factory approved method.

SteveC
I cringe when I hear people saying all you need is an impact wrench to do this and ensure that you make a mark to set the nut back to the same clock position. Some will even endorse using an impact wrench with a torque limiter such as they use to get lug nuts close enough. You do have to follow procedure and get these exactly correct to prevent problems down the road. Not sure what the failure rate would be but it would seem the be a 50/50 roll of the dice at best when you take the alternate route.
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seabeelt
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by seabeelt »

Understand all of what you folks are saying, however, for clarification. Depth of threads was counted, position marked and then the nut was removed with impact wrench so as not to struggle with spin of the axel during removal. Installation was done without the impact wrench, nut was returned to original position, and just a tiny bit more pressure on the wench to ensure we have good pressure on the crush washer. Yes there is an assumption that the lash is correct to begin with.Being that this is a front assembled pumpkin, I. E. No inspection cover on the rear, I wasn't about to pull the whole diff apart to change the seal and go the whole bearing and crush washer route. If I have a future problem, it is certainly fixable.
Michael and Deborah Williamson
1971 Spider -Tropie’ - w screaming IDFs
1971 Spider - Vesper -scrapped
1979 Spider - Seraphina - our son's car now sold
1972 Spider - Tortellini- our son's current
DieselSpider
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by DieselSpider »

As long as its an informed discision and you are comfortable with it thats all that matters. Some may see this and not understand the risks unless we discuss them in an obvious fashion. There may be some risks that I am comfortable with that you may not find acceptable too.
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chrisg
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by chrisg »

I'm curious now...a year or so later, did it work out OK?

I have certainly been witness to "careful replacement" approaches & I'm not actually averse to them in theory (definitely knowing the risks), but real life data is always nice to hear about. factory spec on the flange nut is 14-17 in-lbs I believe, so that amounts to about 1.5 ft-lbs....quite light.
Chris Granju
Knoxville, TN
'71 FIAT 124BS (pretty), '72 FIAT 124BC,'76 FIAT 128 Wagon(ratbeast), '85 Bertone X 1/9, '70 124BC (project), 79 X1/9 (hot rod in rehab), '73 124BS (2L, mean), '74 124 Special TC, '73 124CS, '73 124 Familiare
Boris61
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by Boris61 »

I'm certainly not an expert, but "factory spec" does not refer to the pinion nut torque. It is the rolling torque required to turn the bearing and shaft without the other parts (wheels, rotors, axel shafts, diff gears). That is why it is so "light". To achieve this the pinion nut has to crush a single-use metal sleeve and that takes a lot of torque (like 150+).
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Re: Pinion Seal

Post by DieselSpider »

Boris61 wrote:I'm certainly not an expert, but "factory spec" does not refer to the pinion nut torque. It is the rolling torque required to turn the bearing and shaft without the other parts (wheels, rotors, axel shafts, diff gears). That is why it is so "light". To achieve this the pinion nut has to crush a single-use metal sleeve and that takes a lot of torque (like 150+).
Yes and when you reuse it there is a chance that due to wear from use since it was last set that it will no longer be correct when you tighten it back up. You roll the dice by cracking it a bit more to compensate however its still a calculated risk. Everyone's hand and experience is different just like when trying to replicate Nana's bread recipe, while many try and get it almost right few get it exactly the same.
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