yeah, driveshaft angle kills HP but when was the last time you saw the driveshaft angle on a severely lifted 4x4? Those things have scary driveline angles! They'll tilt the rear end to straighten out the pinion angle to the driveshaft but I wonder what happens when they no longer have oil on the bearings since the pinion angle is so pronounced.
I'd set the pinion 3 degrees low to make sure there's no pinion to driveshaft interference. I leveled my motor and tranny out making adjustments to the crossmember and then set the rear drive shaft 3 degrees low. Trust me, if the pinion is too high it'll hit the driveshaft and knock the heads of the bolts off the pinion. Been there, done that! If you get a good bite on the pavement the pinion is going to the sky unless you have some ladder bars, Cal-tracs or a pinion stop. LOL
Last edited by NITROUS; 08-02-2007 at 03:27 PM.
97 GMC, 2002 LS6.
1991 GMC Syclone #1428
how exactly do you measure the * prolly something ill wana know for my swap since i have a 4/6 drop aswell
I've done this by positioning the trans & pinion yokes such that the side of each yoke is parallel to the ground (to use somewhat of a flat surface). Placing the angle finder on the yokes will show you an angle measurement. Mine are within 1 degree of each other (4 & 5 degrees - trans & pinion respectively).
5.3L '86 Silverado (E/T: 14.37s @ 94mph) - First Time Out!Test-n-Tune (Nov 23, 2008) - 13.65s @ 98mph