So @charliec had a dilima, reuse his steering shaft that showed signs of having been molested or replace it.
As luck would have it I had an unmolested steering shaft for the application and I have always wanted to cut apart a steering shaft. So we agreed to swap shafts, I paid postage to him and he paid postage to me. A Win Win for both of us.
Like a kid on Christmas morning I got the box and unwrapped it. I looked it over and then....
Cut it in half!
The red arrow points to the missing bit of plastic. The first indication Charliec had that something was wrong.
The green arrow points to a bit of plastic that was still in place BUT was no longer attached to where it was supposed to be.
The other side also looked fine BUT they were not!
In my first attempt at separating the outer part from the inner part I put a open end wrench on the inner shaft and with the inner shaft chucked in a vice I started tapping on the outer part in the direction of the arrow (making the shaft longer if it was still intact) but it stopped after about an inch.
Never giving up I tapper the outer shaft the other direction (making the shaft shorter which could cause the shaft to come out of the coupler) The outer piece slid right over the inner shaft with relative ease. Unfortunately I did not get a photo of that. BUT due to the inner and outer shaft profiles the outer shaft could not slip off the inner shaft by the be upper bearing and splined end.
So to get the outer piece of shaft off I decided to cut it lengthwise on both sides
The green circles show where the plastics bits fell out of the outer shaft
The blue circles show where the plastic bit retained in the outer shaft
The Red arrows show where the inner shaft is smooshed to make it wider and where the outer shaft is crushed down to make it narrower preventing the inner and outer shaft from getting longer buy more then an inch or so. BUT nothing stops it from getting shorter, and remember shorter is bad!
Here you can see the injected plastic that would normally keep the two shafts aligned.
The red arrows point to where the plastic that is visible on the outside of the outer shaft was attached at one time.
Now there was some discussion that the visible plastic was just injected into a through hole in the inner shaft.
That was not the case on this shaft
I melted off the (Nylon or Teflon) and there was only a channel, No through hole. Perhaps on newer shafts they modified the design.
Here is what the inner and outer shafts look like when aligned properly. (Obviously I took this photo AFTER melting off the alignment plastic)
This is one of the bits of visible plastic, I knocked it out of the outer 1/2 The OD of the shear part is about 0.090"
Continued
As luck would have it I had an unmolested steering shaft for the application and I have always wanted to cut apart a steering shaft. So we agreed to swap shafts, I paid postage to him and he paid postage to me. A Win Win for both of us.
Like a kid on Christmas morning I got the box and unwrapped it. I looked it over and then....
Cut it in half!
The red arrow points to the missing bit of plastic. The first indication Charliec had that something was wrong.
The green arrow points to a bit of plastic that was still in place BUT was no longer attached to where it was supposed to be.
The other side also looked fine BUT they were not!
In my first attempt at separating the outer part from the inner part I put a open end wrench on the inner shaft and with the inner shaft chucked in a vice I started tapping on the outer part in the direction of the arrow (making the shaft longer if it was still intact) but it stopped after about an inch.
Never giving up I tapper the outer shaft the other direction (making the shaft shorter which could cause the shaft to come out of the coupler) The outer piece slid right over the inner shaft with relative ease. Unfortunately I did not get a photo of that. BUT due to the inner and outer shaft profiles the outer shaft could not slip off the inner shaft by the be upper bearing and splined end.
So to get the outer piece of shaft off I decided to cut it lengthwise on both sides
The green circles show where the plastics bits fell out of the outer shaft
The blue circles show where the plastic bit retained in the outer shaft
The Red arrows show where the inner shaft is smooshed to make it wider and where the outer shaft is crushed down to make it narrower preventing the inner and outer shaft from getting longer buy more then an inch or so. BUT nothing stops it from getting shorter, and remember shorter is bad!
Here you can see the injected plastic that would normally keep the two shafts aligned.
The red arrows point to where the plastic that is visible on the outside of the outer shaft was attached at one time.
Now there was some discussion that the visible plastic was just injected into a through hole in the inner shaft.
That was not the case on this shaft
I melted off the (Nylon or Teflon) and there was only a channel, No through hole. Perhaps on newer shafts they modified the design.
Here is what the inner and outer shafts look like when aligned properly. (Obviously I took this photo AFTER melting off the alignment plastic)
This is one of the bits of visible plastic, I knocked it out of the outer 1/2 The OD of the shear part is about 0.090"
Continued















