UPDATE- I said I would check runout when I got it together, so here it is. .00125, back edge of the ring gear. That said, I used my Harbor Freight magnetic dial indicator, so....
Space shuttle precision, eh? Mind posting a picture of your indicator? I have a buddy in DOGE that's looking to save NASA some money.
That's the ring gear. How flat is the surface it's bolted to?
Link? Only seeing thousandths (0.001") on their website. Or are you interpolating between lines?
Speaking of accuracy and precision, has anyone checked runout on on any of the "preferred" Sure Grip manufacturers units? I'd like to see if they're as well machined as everyone thinks they are.
There's more to it than accuracy of machining, Mechnerd. I've machined Chinese castings with bolts, sand, cracks, and cavities in them. I've seen Chinese counterfeit materials that weren't even in the same family of materials that they claimed to be due to alloying issues (aluminum advertised as bronze, cast iron advertised as stainless steel). I've seen falsified X-ray certs, warranty cards with no filing addresses, and just plain TRASH come out of these foundries.
I'm not saying it won't work, and I'd love to be wrong on this, but I'm not hopeful for what you want to be true about this, and I'm
very skeptical that someone that owns a dial indicator that reads hundred-thousandths of an inch would try to run this for a second. (Let's get real for a minute, most CNC machines are set up to 0.0005"). I have worked in a machine shop that produced cert'd equipment and parts for aerospace, and they didn't have indicators that would read that.
I'm even more skeptical that a machined surface that's
visibly that rough would be comprised of quality materials and manufacturing. To be fair, I can JB weld a ring gear to a rock and set it up to turn within a couple thou. Doesn't mean the rock is the right part for the job or is going to hold up.
If this diff goes in and lasts for 100k miles, I'll be damned impressed. If
75 percent of them produced do that, then I'll admit you were right. You have to remember, it's not about getting one part to do the job. It's about getting
most of them to do the job. But, bolt it in. Let's see how it does!