Re: Woo Hoo! Santa came early....
Yes, the stock cover is on. It has to come off for the 500 mile lube change, so I'm probably going to add a drain plug at that time.
When calling around to find shops that would do the rear work and did gears on a regular basis, the estimates were all over. From $200 to $800. I finally got a recommendation to use Steves Transmission Repair in Stillwater, NJ. Steve runs a very nice and small custom shop where the builds 1/4 mile cars for clients, and supplies built transmission for any racing application. So gear changes and differentials were second nature to him. He said the price was a flat fee of $300 plus extra labor charge for problem situations, additional parts, etc. Sounded fair to me so he got the job. I was surprised that even though he had to pull the pinion to shim if after going for a test drive, the extra labor charge was only $80. That means he had to pull the axles, differential, etc to remove the pinion and add shims, then reinstall everything. Like doing the whole job twice.
So, if you can find a good trans shop, they do rear gears regularly and should be able to do the job quick, efficiently, and most importantly, set the gears correctly.
BTW, I did a lot of reading up on gear install. I was surprised to read (more than once) that the bearings should not be changed unless they are high mileage or damaged when pressed off the carrier or pinion. Steve agrees with that assessment, and having 33k miles on my car, he had no problem reusing all the bearings. But he did use new bolts for the ring gear and new nut on the pinion shaft.
Originally posted by Crazed98Camaro
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When calling around to find shops that would do the rear work and did gears on a regular basis, the estimates were all over. From $200 to $800. I finally got a recommendation to use Steves Transmission Repair in Stillwater, NJ. Steve runs a very nice and small custom shop where the builds 1/4 mile cars for clients, and supplies built transmission for any racing application. So gear changes and differentials were second nature to him. He said the price was a flat fee of $300 plus extra labor charge for problem situations, additional parts, etc. Sounded fair to me so he got the job. I was surprised that even though he had to pull the pinion to shim if after going for a test drive, the extra labor charge was only $80. That means he had to pull the axles, differential, etc to remove the pinion and add shims, then reinstall everything. Like doing the whole job twice.
So, if you can find a good trans shop, they do rear gears regularly and should be able to do the job quick, efficiently, and most importantly, set the gears correctly.
BTW, I did a lot of reading up on gear install. I was surprised to read (more than once) that the bearings should not be changed unless they are high mileage or damaged when pressed off the carrier or pinion. Steve agrees with that assessment, and having 33k miles on my car, he had no problem reusing all the bearings. But he did use new bolts for the ring gear and new nut on the pinion shaft.
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