CALMINI
Heavy Duty Rear Axles |
A
Stronger Axle Option for Your Sidekick or Tracker. |
Editor/Photo: Eric Bewley |
Corvallis, OR - When
building up a new vehicle, it always seems like there are a couple of weak
links that need to be address right away. In the case of the Sidekick one
of the issues is the rear axle strength. As soon as you add a locker and
up-size the tires a couple of notches, you're bound to have problems in
this area. Calmini products has created a solution designed to solve the
busted-axle blues.
Calmini states that their
completely new forged axles are 30% stronger than stock. They are made
from 4140 alloy steel and that the redesigned input spline area greatly
reduces the chance of shearing or breaking.
Installation is quite simple
and if your switching over from a Samurai, you'll especially enjoy the
fact that you can remove the axle without having to remove the backing
plate for the brakes. A jack, floor stands, basic hand tools, and a press
(or a machine shop to do the press work) is all you need.
| 1 - Prepare the new
axles. The axles are shipped to your door bare and need to have
the bearing retainer, bearing, and axle flange pressed on to them.
We used our trusty ZUKIWORLD "H" press but any local
machine shop will do this for a minimal fee. |
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| 2 - Jack the vehicle up,
support it on jack stands, and remove the wheels/tires. |
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| 3 - Remove the brake
drum, the four bolts on the back of the axle tube flange that hold
the axle into the axle tube, and remove the old axle. Bet you have
twisted splines! Reverse this process to install your new Calmini
axles. |
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| 4 - One thing to note is
that there are some different brake combinations out there. I had
the late model 4-door brakes in which the axle has a 5 on
5.5" flange. The early-model 4-door brakes have the smaller 4
bolt flange similar to the Calmini axles. The other parts of the
brakes are the same so converting back was a simple as just
pushing on the new (older) drum. |
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| 5- All done, install
wheels and tires and put the vehicle on the ground. It is time to
test! |
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In the shots above, you can
see the quality of the workmanship and the newly redesigned axle shaft to
input spline area. On the failures that I have had with the stock axles the
break begins right at this transition area. The new shafts are not only a
stronger alloy they have this stress point removed. During our vigorous
testing we were amazed at the amount of abuse such as hoping and bouncing
these new axles will take. Our test vehicle is no light weight weighing in
at about 3500 pounds and sporting 33 inch tall tires. With the hopped-up 1.6
engine, 4:1 t-case gears, 5:12 r&p, and lockers, we had no problems with
these axles. They worked great! For some reason though, when we tripled our
horsepower and torque by adding a V6, they didn't hold up indefinitely. I guess
everything has it's limits.

In conclusion, if your
looking for an axle solution for your Sidekick or Tracker and plan on
keeping the 4-cylinder (even hopping one up to it's maximum potential) look
no further. Calmini products has the answer you are looking for.
ZW
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