Rear End Clunk

heatandair

Enthusiast
Joined
Jan 16, 2002
Posts
42
Reaction score
0
Location
Hiltom Head S.C
A few weeks ago i slammed second gear and herd a loud clunk in the rear. After that i checked the u joints and found a bad one connected to the stub axel. After i replaced it i still herd the clunk, but only in first gear and, or reverse when a good amount of torque is applied. The clunk is definetlly coming from the rear. A few weeks later i snapped the same u joint in a day to day drive. This time we noticed the half shaft was twisted. After an uphill battle with dodge they would not warranty the shaft or the u joint. DLM sent me a half shaft and u joint for free (Thanks again Doug) and i installed it today. With all new u joints and a new half shaft i still have a bad clunk when power is applied. I was thinking bad spider gears because then only spin when tires are moving unequally (Under high torque, wheels spinning). I haven't pulled the rear apart yet because i want to narrow the serch down some more. Has anyone had similar problems or advise? Unitrax installed 3.55 6 months ago.
 

FRANK RT/10

Viper Owner
Joined
Dec 19, 2002
Posts
69
Reaction score
0
Location
Trinity,Florida
Well I had a clunck in the rear of my 94 rt/10 and it was the rear. A tooth came of one of the gears and that is what caused it. They said it was most likely a weakspot in the metal when the gar was made.
 

GR8_ASP

Enthusiast
Joined
May 28, 1998
Posts
5,637
Reaction score
1
Seem to remember something about the fit between some of the rear drive components (hub, knuckle, etc.). That during a torque reversal it would slip ever so little and make the clunking sound. I seem to remember a TSB on the subject.
 

Chuck B 98 GTS

Enthusiast
Joined
Feb 6, 2001
Posts
288
Reaction score
0
Location
N.C.
If everything else looks good it's probably a broken gear, a tooth may be broken off. You have to remove the entire rear end to inspect it. It takes a while and two people. You have to remove the rear exhaust assembly to get to the rear.

Cheers,
Chuck
 
OP
OP
H

heatandair

Enthusiast
Joined
Jan 16, 2002
Posts
42
Reaction score
0
Location
Hiltom Head S.C
can it cause any damage if it is a bad tooth? Should it be fixed asap? Could slamming gears hurt it more? The clunk is not in the same spot when in gear. it only clunks when enough torque is applied to make the wheels spin.
 

Bugeater

Enthusiast
Joined
Jul 30, 2001
Posts
1,076
Reaction score
0
Location
Virginia Beach
Interesting....I too had that "clunk". It scared the **** outta me since I too was hitting the gears and RPM's pretty good. It was loud.

Interestingly enough we both have 3:55's. My halfshafts and driveshaft look OK too. Lends more towards the bad/broken gear theory.
 

SnakeAv8r

Viper Owner
Joined
Dec 3, 2002
Posts
47
Reaction score
0
Location
Camano Island, WA, USA
I read a warrentee bill from my cars previous owner and the complaint was a loud clunck from the rear end under hard accelleration. He inspected and found that the diff mounting bolts were loose. He tightened them and solved it. I have not heard the noise since i have owned the car but thought you might be interested. good luck.
 

SoCal Rebell

Enthusiast
Joined
Oct 3, 2000
Posts
3,035
Reaction score
0
Location
Mission Hills, Ca USA
I read a warrentee bill from my cars previous owner and the complaint was a loud clunck from the rear end under hard accelleration. He inspected and found that the diff mounting bolts were loose. He tightened them and solved it. I have not heard the noise since i have owned the car but thought you might be interested. good luck.
Yup, same thing happened to me, the mounting bolts were loose.
 

SMCBUILDERSINC

Enthusiast
Joined
Jan 17, 2002
Posts
288
Reaction score
0
Location
Hilton Head Island, SC
Heatandair:
I think your horn fluid might be low or maybe you left your sky hooks under the rear, hahaha

I told you to buy a black Viper, they are built better then those dang yellow ones and their faster, hahaha
 

Vip-RT10

Enthusiast
Joined
Feb 3, 2001
Posts
1,219
Reaction score
1
Location
Clearwater,FL.USA
I had similar problem and it was loose bolts holding the differential torque bar below. Tighten those really good. I did and clunk went away.
 

Roland L-Ocala FL

Enthusiast
Joined
Oct 16, 2000
Posts
498
Reaction score
0
Location
Ocala, FL USA
It's probably the bolts for the rear end and the ladder bar. There was a recall notice for this on the Gen 1 cars. Mine keeps getting out of spec every once in a while, I go back to the daeler, he re-torques the bolts, and ta da, the klunk goes away.
 

Jack B

Enthusiast
Joined
Nov 5, 2000
Posts
3,484
Reaction score
0
Location
NE Ohio
A couple of thoughts - a noise from a broken tooth on the ring/pinion would be there all the time, however, if there is damage in the limited slip portion, there is a possibility of an intermittent noise under torque
 

Roland L-Ocala FL

Enthusiast
Joined
Oct 16, 2000
Posts
498
Reaction score
0
Location
Ocala, FL USA
Tomcat,
If you have a transferrable warranty, then all you did with the older ones was to pay for the transfer fee, and now it was like you were the original owner. For the newer warranties, ther is no fee if I remember. But the entire car is covered, including the drive train. Nothing changes because it is a transfer, it is like you ae now the original owner.
 

Latest posts

Forum statistics

Threads
153,215
Posts
1,682,039
Members
17,708
Latest member
xeng yang
Top