View Full Version : axle ID questions
fledgling666
11-12-2003, 11:47 AM
this may be a strange couple of questions, but......
i was under my friend's 720 t-case equipped pick-up the other day and noticed a small, round, 3rd member rear axle. it reminded me strikingly of my Kia Sportage rear axle and was wondering if it possibly could be? would anyone have information like this? are there any specs on this axle? thanks, mostly curiosity, but could turn out to be something.
bignissan
11-12-2003, 11:55 AM
that is probably the h190....i THINK that is the other 3rd member rear end...but not sure. I know the other one is the H233b and that one is strong! the small one is otherwise known as junk...not sure on dimensions of axles on that one though.
fledgling666
11-12-2003, 12:30 PM
well, here's the interesting thing, i was following a hard-body pick-up yesterday afternoon, and it had the same sized diff and rounded housing, but i didn't see the 3rd member, so i couldn't tell if the webbing was the same or similar. so, if it's in the hard-body, is it the h190? or h233b? was probably a 4-cyl HB.
bignissan
11-12-2003, 02:14 PM
it depends, the v-6 hb's have the h233b, the 4 cylinders had the c200 which has a diff cover, and some of the newer ones have the h233b. the older trucks(maybe some hb's, but not sure) had the other drop out axle, which i THINK is the 190...but i could be wrong. basically the only good axle Nissan made is the 233b, which has a 233mm ring gear ( a little larger than 9") and 31 spline axle shafts. the newer ones are 33 spline. the BIG downside of them is gear availability and COST of parts.
Bad Gear availabilty for Nissan ?? Dude for the H233b you have 4.11, 4.875, 5.13 and 5.88 .. need anything else ?? :D I agree they are expensive at 450 per axle :mad:
My HB is a 93 4 cilinder (well , was) but is came with the H233B rear axle and 4.875 gears. Strange world this Nissan axles .. here's a pic on mid page :
SAS conversion page (http://www.geocities.com/jpvmlichttotobal/SASconversion.html)
fledgling666
11-13-2003, 09:15 AM
ok, thanks, it's definitely not that axle, so it's still possible maybe it's the 190. i'll do some comparisons next time i'm at that guys house. hmmm, 5.88's, huh? woulda been nice to know that before i bought a D44 front. there is one set of 5.88's prototyped floating around in a Sportage somewhere in the midwest.
cybersniper
01-01-2004, 02:17 PM
Dear NISSAN list:
I have a YJ and live in Spain, I normally post at the Jeep list but as I am going to swap in Nissan axles, I have some questions and donīt know if you have the same units in the US.
The NISSAN PATROL GR rear axles we have here are AWESOME that is why we all swap them in. The rear axles are 35mm diameter and 38 at the splines !!!!. Everybody uses NISSANS here you donīt see D60 around...... even if they are available.
The front units are very stout too.
What axles do the US patrols have????
Eduardo
The US Patrols are not a reality unless you are talking about 35 year old junk. That is why we all use d44's and other stuff for our swaps. But please send some pics and stuff about the axles you use! I want to see what all the hype is about that Nissan swap you all do.
guy_r
01-02-2004, 05:55 AM
Originally posted by cybersniper
Dear NISSAN list:
I have a YJ and live in Spain, I normally post at the Jeep list but as I am going to swap in Nissan axles, I have some questions and donīt know if you have the same units in the US.
The NISSAN PATROL GR rear axles we have here are AWESOME that is why we all swap them in. The rear axles are 35mm diameter and 38 at the splines !!!!. Everybody uses NISSANS here you donīt see D60 around...... even if they are available.
The front units are very stout too.
What axles do the US patrols have????
Eduardo
Eduardo the best place to look at seriously modded patrols is Australian sites and boards, they GR (Known as a GU here) is quite common and would be the second highest selling large 4x4 in Aus.
The axles on the Hb260 are actually 37 spline :) and 38.4mm making them oh so slightly heavier than a dana 70.
The GQ (model before the GR\GU) has slightly smaller birfield joints that break a bit more easily, but still take a pounding. There is a place here called CORE engineering that make corefields kinda like a longfeild for a Nissan and they have a very good reputation with the comp guys, and they wheel hard...
cybersniper
01-02-2004, 11:17 AM
Originally posted by guy_r
Eduardo the best place to look at seriously modded patrols is Australian sites and boards, they GR (Known as a GU here) is quite common and would be the second highest selling large 4x4 in Aus.
The axles on the Hb260 are actually 37 spline :) and 38.4mm making them oh so slightly heavier than a dana 70.
The GQ (model before the GR\GU) has slightly smaller birfield joints that break a bit more easily, but still take a pounding. There is a place here called CORE engineering that make corefields kinda like a longfeild for a Nissan and they have a very good reputation with the comp guys, and they wheel hard...
Thanks for the axle names... WE DO have seriosly modified patrols here too, and we stick the patril axles to everything.....because they are stouter than a D60 and easily obtainable. Thanks for the links
eduardo
ShortMav
01-19-2005, 03:54 AM
I compete in a GQ Patrol in Victoria Aus. It is a modified 4.2L petrol with Garret GT30/40 turbo. I break front C/V's and axles and couldn't locate Core Engineering on the Net. Can you supply contact details as I would be keen to see what they have to offer. Most guys are fitting GU front and read Diff assemblies here as they are stronger.
onlyonedr
01-19-2005, 09:39 PM
Back to the original question.
For certain, the 720 used the H190 if it had the Hotchkiss-type axle with dropout 3rd. Otherwise you will find a Salisbury-type C200 in the rear. The H233B was not used in the 720. Heresay aside, I know of one guys who wheels his hardbody pretty good and has a Detroit stuffed in that H190.
The Hotchkiss-style axle is not quite as common anymore, some imports still use this design (Toyotas, Kias, the last of the "old" Nissans). The Ford 9" is quite possibly the most well known of that style axle. The commonality is the stamped-steel style axle housing and cast 3rd member. Years ago many manufacturers used that design, Chrysler had a few, Chevrolet, etc. They all look very much the same but with different sizes, etc.
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