« Reply #5 on: October 24, 2011, 04:00:06 PM »
Somewhere I have a link to a company that sells refurbished units and upgrade parts. I thought they had them for under a 100 dollars. I'll start searching for where I saved that link. This is an awesome write up I just found online detailing how someone changed it on a 249. We should have the same exact coupling and similar installation steps in our Eagle transfer cases.
http://www.masoncomputing.com/np249/You're supposed to use anearobic sealer instead of RTV. Thats a type of sealer that stays liquid in the presence of oxygen. I've heard horror stories of excess RTV breaking off inside the case and clogging oiling holes, which burns up bearings pretty quick.
You're right that a properly working Viscous coupling will resist you a great deal. I've heard of people driving for a few hours in 4WD without a front driveshaft before the viscous coupling gets smoked. It should be strong enough to propel the car forward. Once it burns out its not that big of a deal, since some Eagles don''t even have one. It a normal open differential once they stop working. Very few Eagle owners have working units.
« Last Edit: October 24, 2011, 04:11:00 PM by captspillane »
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Currently Inspected and Insured as of Jan 2013:
-1985 Eagle Station Wagon 258 T5 Stickshift
-1980 Eagle Station Wagon 258 Auto Fuel-injected with GM TBI
Minor Repairs Underway:
-1982 Eagle SX4 258 T5
-1981 Kammback 2.5L Iron Duke T5
Restoration Efforts Near Completion:
-1982 SX4- 401 NV3550
-1983 SX4- 4.5 MPI NSG370 (6 Speed)
Restoration Efforts Underway:
-1985 SW- 4.0 MPI AX15
-1982 SX4- 4.0 AW4
-1981 SX4- SD33T NV4500 (Turbodiesel 5 speed)
Future Rescue Efforts- '85 Maroon SW, '87 Limited SW, '84 Limited SW, '87 4 door Sedan, '81 2 door Sedan, '88 White SW, '77 4 door Hornet, '74 2 door Hornet, '79 Spirit AMX, '81 Kammback.
RIP- Red '81 SX4, '84 4dr Sedan, '84 SW, '81 SW, '80 Spirit, '83 SW, '83 4dr Sedan