Jump to content
  • Welcome to 205GTIDrivers.com!

    Hello dear visitor! Feel free to browse but we invite you to register completely free of charge in order to enjoy the full functionality of the website.

Sign in to follow this  
peter

My Car Eats Driveshafts

Recommended Posts

peter

Right been running my 2.0 turbo on the road for about 2 months now with the new engine and 1.9 box its all perfect however after lowering it 50mm it just seems to kill the drive shafts on both sides.Posibly because its to low but ive never heard of any one else having any problems and its not as if the engine is putting out a stupid amount of torque either all be it they are just 1.6 shafts.Any ideas?Could i have possibly fitted somthing wrong which would cause more wear?

 

 

Thanks

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Pete C

1.6 driveshafts are not as substantial as 1.9 shafts, in fact I think they're the same as some lesser models so they're probably just not up to the job. Lowering it that much won't help either, probably putting more stress on the bearings.

 

If you upgrade to 1.9 hubs at the front, then next time you can fit 1.9 shafts, everything else (brakes etc) should just bolt to the 1.9 hubs :D

Edited by Pete C

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
peter

Well ive just bought 309 gti hubs shafts and track arms so i hope they will be up to the job however with the negative camber they are going to create it could make it worse.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
sonofsam

A tilted engine may not help either, unfortunately :blush:

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sam

I always thought the point of a driveshaft was the theory of 'constant velocity', i.e. they work at different angles. So lowering the car may, in theory, make them run straighter if anything. I've ran a 'lowish' car for 4 years and still run the original shafts (bar one I changed recently because the boot split and I was lazy). I think the issue with ride height and shafts in non-sense. Perhaps you just got some mickey mouse driveshafts, try a different brand perhaps. GKN seem to be OK (GSF Supplied, or always used to be).

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Craigb

Are you snapping shafts or bursting CV joints?

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Shevy

I used to suffer the same problem in my old 1.6 GTi, that was lowered 60mm on the front.

Not only did the gaitors keep splitting but the CV joint keep going on them aswell and this was having original driveshafts from Peugeot fitted !!!

 

Eventually I got so fed up and was told to change to the stronger 1.9 setup, so I made the most of it and changed to 309 setup on the front

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
peter
Perhaps you just got some mickey mouse driveshafts, try a different brand perhaps. GKN seem to be OK (GSF Supplied, or always used to be

 

The first two shafts were original peugeot items and then AMK items.

 

 

Are you snapping shafts or bursting CV joints?

 

The first one snapped clean throught the cv joint itself on the long driveshaft and i was left with part of the joint stuck in the hub :angry: but the rest have just started to knock badly so i changd them.

 

However the the car isnt exactly standard and has enough torque to spin the wheels in third when its dry.The tires arnt that special either continental sportcaontact2s.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
C_W

It doesn't sound like a torque problem to me per se. On a light car even with big power you don't tend to have problems with drivetrain as the light weight reduces the stress a great deal as I find mine is very very light on the clutch too. Do you do a lot of hard standing starts? or accelerating hard with a lot of lock on out of junctions? this might wear them out but it sounds like they're just running at less than ideal angles.

 

I've never had problems with driveshafts (only bought one set, GKN) even after 50 trackdays of thrashing and over 100,000miles of road driving. I know the Mi16 doesn't output as much torque as the turbo

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Ahl

My friends 50/60mm low 1.6 also ate its driveshafts.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Craigb

Sounds like an angle issue to me..

 

With remanufactured shafts , which almost all are now , there is not as much meat in the CV cups , running lower is going to change the angle and thus the pressure point in the joint . At excessive angles they just aren't up to the job . So an extra degree of caution is needed

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
pug_ham

Also sounds like an angle issue to me, if the car is lowered to far the driveshafts have no give in them between the joints so they will jam solid easier which could cause them to snap.

 

I run mine on 1.6 front set up (GKN shafts) & my car has 140bhp @ the fly, is lowered approx 40mm but I've had no problems on mine yet & that includes several trackdays.

 

Graham.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Rob_the_Sparky

And Saveloy runs a 1.6 set-up on his turbo with as far as I know no problems and his Turbo isn't short on a few horses. I'd suspect angle rather than torque/power issues.

 

Rob

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
tom_m

the tilt on the turbo engine probably isn't helping either.

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Fuqa
the tilt on the turbo engine probably isn't helping either.

 

 

mine is tilted also... but running 1.9 shafts.. lowered 40mm and has been fine for 3+yrs

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
jackherer
mine is tilted also... but running 1.9 shafts.. lowered 40mm and has been fine for 3+yrs

 

I ran my Mi16 with it tilted for a long time and my old, original driveshafts were fine (and still are).

Share this post


Link to post
Share on other sites
Sign in to follow this  

×