Purpose of the U-Joint
Purpose of the U-Joint
I was recently surprised to discover that there's a u-joint in the middle of Mercedes driveshafts. It's no big secret, I guess, just something I've never messed with.
My question is why is it there? If there's an angle between the tranny and diff, then you would need two u-joints, otherwise the driveshaft would wobble. Where there's one, you would expect a second, 90 degrees out of phase to counteract the wobble. Alternatively, you could have one double Cardan joint.
One u-joint is only wobble free if the transmission and diff are exactly in line. But if they are in line, there's no need for a U-Joint. It could be that the u-joint takes up small angular variations due to the rubber driveline mounts. But I thought that's what the flex disks did. You would probably have some wheel hop on hard acceleration if the joint isn't phase paired with something. And yet is all seems to work.
(09-26-2013, 03:32 PM)hooblah Cant help you there mate, but two terms I've come across when talking about propshafts are cardan and spicer. What do these mean?
(09-26-2013, 03:32 PM)hooblah Cant help you there mate, but two terms I've come across when talking about propshafts are cardan and spicer. What do these mean?
Older BMW's have a similar kind of setup on there drive shafts also my guess is to compensate for engine torquing when the engine and transmission rock over in there mounts under load. Bmw and Mercedes of the time have fairly narrow drive shaft tunnels maybe they where worried one long shaft could rock over and hit it under high stress situations.
The rather unfortunate upshot of them using a spicer where there is hardly any movement is that it results in the joint ' false brinelling' and the joint becoming aligned in one plane only. Try it next time you have a Merc shaft out. The centre joint feels like it has a notch position around centre.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/False_brinelling
Subaru have the same problem with there rear shafts and they usually have 3 joints they never move so they always get knotchy near center
(09-27-2013, 09:28 AM)willbhere4u Older BMW's have a similar kind of setup on there drive shafts also my guess is to compensate for engine torquing when the engine and transmission rock over in there mounts under load.
(09-27-2013, 09:40 AM)willbhere4u Subaru have the same problem with there rear shafts and they usually have 3 joints they never move so they always get knotchy near center
(09-27-2013, 09:28 AM)willbhere4u Older BMW's have a similar kind of setup on there drive shafts also my guess is to compensate for engine torquing when the engine and transmission rock over in there mounts under load.
(09-27-2013, 09:40 AM)willbhere4u Subaru have the same problem with there rear shafts and they usually have 3 joints they never move so they always get knotchy near center