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any one make their own driveshaft

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by JYPSEA, Feb 7, 2009.

  1. JYPSEA
    Joined: Dec 11, 2007
    Posts: 193

    JYPSEA
    Member
    from Florida

    Is it possible to make a drive shaft at home? or is this just plain stupid?
    I mean take 2 shafts cut one end off and weld it to the other?
    I have a 8.8 rear and a 400 trans was thinking of making a drive shaft out of 2 others. I know I can't ballance it but I've seen lots of driveshafts with weights missing.
     
  2. Dreddybear
    Joined: Mar 31, 2007
    Posts: 6,132

    Dreddybear
    Member

    That's what I plan on doing.
     
  3. brigrat
    Joined: Nov 9, 2007
    Posts: 5,882

    brigrat
    Member
    from Wa.St.

    When we used to have 4-5 wrecking yards around our town I used to make my own. You will need a metal cutting band saw a lathe and a wirefeed or? Never had a problem, never needed ballancing. So yes it was done all the time, now it will cost $300-$400 at a drive line shop as apposed to one bill in the old dayz. JMO
     
  4. choppintops
    Joined: Dec 9, 2008
    Posts: 1,460

    choppintops
    BANNED

    I have made over 50 now, yet to have to have any balanced.

    Or rather I should say "shortened", not made.
     
  5. brigrat
    Joined: Nov 9, 2007
    Posts: 5,882

    brigrat
    Member
    from Wa.St.

    Yes, shortened is the word.............................
     
  6. Ebbsspeed
    Joined: Nov 11, 2005
    Posts: 6,359

    Ebbsspeed
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    It can be done. I made one once by using two driveshafts, one that was a nice tight fit inside the other. I cut one end off of each, slid one inside the other to the right length, then welded. It turned out OK, but was just a touch out of balance.
     
  7. gas pumper
    Joined: Aug 13, 2007
    Posts: 2,957

    gas pumper
    Member

    Not a big deal. Square cuts and carefull line up. I've also done many over the years and only screwed up twice.
    Genereally if you assemble correctly so there is no runout before you weld, the balance will be OK. .
     
  8. brigrat
    Joined: Nov 9, 2007
    Posts: 5,882

    brigrat
    Member
    from Wa.St.

    Stay away from the tapered drive shafts, look for 2 that are the same diameter the hole lenght......................
     
  9. krooser
    Joined: Jul 25, 2004
    Posts: 4,584

    krooser
    Member

    Yeah I've made my own. It's best to use a lathe to cut off the old tube from the yoke and to cut a perfect end for the shaft to mate to the yoke... not impossible to do without a lathe but you'll get a nicer finished shaft if you have a lathe.

    My local driveline shop charges $90.00 to shorten and balance a used shaft. I had them re-tube the one going in my F100 and it cost $280.00.
     
  10. JYPSEA
    Joined: Dec 11, 2007
    Posts: 193

    JYPSEA
    Member
    from Florida

    That settles it I am headed for the junk yard . Thanks for the input.
     
  11. choppintops
    Joined: Dec 9, 2008
    Posts: 1,460

    choppintops
    BANNED

    Although I have a lathe, I have never used it to make a driveshaft, and I have yet had to balance one.

    Here is how I do it. I take a air cutoff tool and cut in the center of the weld on one end. Don't cut all the way through, just through the weld. Then knock off the end with a hammer. Then, cut the tube to the length I need. I have used both a chop saw and a band saw over the years. Then if you look at the end piece you will notice that it has the stub at helps center it. Then hammer it in. I set it on a nice flat surfice (mill table if short enough) and make sure I have them parrallel. Then measure the side distances as close as you can. Once your measurements are the same AND you are parallel, tack weld it in a few spots. Check parralel and lengths again. If it moved, correct it, if it didn't, weld it up. Check one last time after it cools. Then DRIVE. Worst case senrio, you have to get it balanced, but as I said, to date, I haven't had to in over 50 cars.
     
  12. I do mine on a lathe, but the other methods mentioned here work, just remember to keep your U joints in plane.
     
  13. oil'n'rust
    Joined: Oct 9, 2008
    Posts: 120

    oil'n'rust
    Member
    from NewZealand

    A friend of mine told me about a guy he knew:), that made a drive shaft out of some square tube he had, it was for a beach buggy, and it worked fine, not even balenced, and it must have been thrashed, and there was no great technology, just the eyecrometer and good judgement, or crazyness and getting away with it:D
     
  14. buford36
    Joined: Feb 7, 2007
    Posts: 224

    buford36
    Member
    from Maine

    I have a large pipe cutter, like a tubing cutter only bigger. Makes a nice square cut and then I do like Choppinstops does. Tom..
     
  15. born loser
    Joined: Oct 18, 2008
    Posts: 56

    born loser
    Member
    from dallas

    I ran square receiver tube shafts on my rockcrawler. 1/4 wall. you could slam the shafts on the rocks, hit the gas and the shaft would 'walk' the rig sideways.:eek:

    If you need yokes or tubing I have always gotten mine at rockforddriveline.com. Good people.
     
  16. Deuce Roadster
    Joined: Sep 8, 2002
    Posts: 9,519

    Deuce Roadster
    Member Emeritus

    If your salvage yard has a decent selection ... :)

    A lot of the time ... you can find one the correct length and just buy a mechanic's U-Joint and make everything work.

    I had a 48 F-1 with a 283/4speed and a 57 Chevrolet driveshaft fit perfect.
    My 32 roadster has a stock ... never cut or messed with 1988 Corvette aluminum driveshaft ... fits perfect.

    Friend had a Model A coupe ( SBC & T-350 ) and the front driveshaft out of a mid 60's Chevrolet truck fit perfect.

    Pretty simple ... if they hang all the driveshafts up in one place ... which they do around here :D
     
  17. 39 Ford
    Joined: Jan 22, 2006
    Posts: 1,558

    39 Ford
    Member

    I have made lots of them using a tubing cutter, cut thru the weld at the flange and clean the flange up so the shortened tube fits square. Make sure you retain the balance weight, and keep the flange and tube in the exact same alignment it was originally.
     
  18. Von Rigg Fink
    Joined: Jun 11, 2007
    Posts: 13,404

    Von Rigg Fink
    Member
    from Garage

    Made the one on my 53 when i went open drive line, will be making the one for the A when I get to that point..as 39 ford said..same way. I go to the junk yard and pull a nice one..bring it home and shorten it to my desired length and waaaala..drive shaft
     
  19. JYPSEA
    Joined: Dec 11, 2007
    Posts: 193

    JYPSEA
    Member
    from Florida

    Lots of good info, thanks guys.
     
  20. hotrodder3
    Joined: Dec 26, 2005
    Posts: 62

    hotrodder3
    Member
    from maine

    the esiest way to make a good square cut is with a single wheel pipe cutter
    ---dont over tighten as you cut--they always cut square--always remember to tack in 4 places and go back and forth so weld dont pull to one side--also make sure yokes are lined up--i us an i beam to keep em lined up--ive done many --never had one vibrate
     
  21. ibcalaveras
    Joined: May 30, 2006
    Posts: 599

    ibcalaveras
    Member

    Do it..It will work.
    Just keep everything square....If it shakes then have it balanced, If it don't shake , the drive the shit out of it....
     
  22. Screamin' Metal
    Joined: Feb 1, 2009
    Posts: 506

    Screamin' Metal
    Member
    from Oklahoma

    Just take your time and do it right! All the guys here have given you the best advice Avail.!
     
  23. kustomizingkid
    Joined: Sep 6, 2008
    Posts: 225

    kustomizingkid
    Member

    You can balance the shaft using the hose clamp method.
     
  24. dave lewis
    Joined: Dec 12, 2006
    Posts: 1,380

    dave lewis
    Member
    from Nampa ID

    An "old timer" showed me how. All of the advice above was included......Except 2 things.
    1.. The MOST important thing is the "phasing", and his trick was almost too easy.
    Lay the shaft down on the bench. Lay a piece of 1/2" key stock on both the yokes (about a foot long) 90 degrees to the tube.< form a cross + >.
    Sight down the length of the tube, adjust yoke until the key stock lines up exactly.
    Your eye will not lie. Any misalignment will show up easily.
    2.. When welding the tube ALWAYS weld 360 deg. without stopping. This way the heat is evenly applied and will not distort the shaft.
    I have done many shafts this way at the track and in the shop on saturday morning..But i always end up taking them to the driveline shop on monday to have the balance checked ( something about spinning that thing @ 7800 rpm really wants me to have it balanced, LOL )
    Only had to have weight added once..
    Good luck
    Dave
     
  25. If you watch a driveline shop, this is how they weld it in one pass with the shaft slowly turning and welder held in place.
     
  26. I measured the run out on a stock shafts that had weights, typicaly 15 to 25 thou,
    I figure I can usually get a home made one closer than that,
    5 to 10 thou is achievable, lose track of how many, never had a single one ballanced,
    if you clock the shaft and the needle does not swing violently then it won't need balancing.
     
  27. budd
    Joined: Oct 31, 2006
    Posts: 3,478

    budd
    Member

    are you changing the length or just need your shaft to have two different size/types of joints?, if its just two differnt joints then you just need what i call a crossover joint, goes from a ford to a chevy to make it easy.
     
  28. Old thread but I just shortened one and I thought I'd mention a couple things that got left out. I needed to make a two piece into a one piece for my lengthened frame, uncovered engine S10 project. I cut out the center joint/slip joint. I cut out a two inch section, and cut about 3/4" out of that section parallel to the centerline. I compressed this now C shaped section and put it inside the two halves. Before this I drilled 4 holes in each of the two halves near where they would be joined. I lined up the joints and clamped the assembly in angle iron.

    Now this is the crucial part. I installed the shaft between the transfer case and rear axle. I mounted a dial indicator over the top as near the middle as I could get (had to avoid the angle iron, of course).

    I started to weld (MIG) and checked the out of round. If it got out of round in one direction I would weld more on the appropriate side of the joint and let the weld pull it the other direction as it cooled. When I got it within 15 thousandths I welded rosette welds into the aforementioned holes. When I was done I measured 12 thousandths out of round.

    I've made about 10 hollow tube shafts and this one came out the best. I have a 17x60 lathe that I bought since the last time I made a shaft but I didn't have a good way to hold both ends of this shaft so I used my old method of using the car itself as the lathe.

    Here is a link to the full story.

    http://engineconversions.org/showthread.php?p=454#post454
     
  29. I make my own driveshafts.
     

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