View Full Version : Drain Plug and Differential
I have a couple questions I was hoping for some advice on. THe first is the oil drain plug...I have a 1995 6.5 TD k2500 Suburban. Does anyone know what the specs are on the oil drain plug? I went to replace it the other day (nylon washer fell apart) and the parts store had about 3 choices.
Next question (yes I'm new to the self-maintenance thing) is how do I tell what differential / axle set I have on the truck? I'd like to put auto-lockers in, but I haven't a clue which model differential is on the truck.
Thanks in advance for any help!
Cheers!
Barra
sturgeon-phish
02-19-2004, 17:27
In the glovebox is a sticker with a bunch if letter number codes. You can tell your diff ratio using them. A whole list of what the codes are are on link here on DP and do yourself a favor and print them out. I'd guess yours is a GT4 - 3.73, or GT5 - 4.10.
So that would translate to a Dana 41 or Dana 50 or....? Sorry, I'm still a bit lost here, though I do recall seeing the sticker in the glove box (truck's parked in the commuter lot, actually looking it up will have to wait for this evening).
Thanks much!
diesel1995
02-20-2004, 05:34
Being a k2500 suburban you're pretty much limited to 2 choices for axle. You could have either a full or semi-floater 14 bolt axle, its very easy to tell the difference a few ways:
1. Count the differential cover bolts in the rear, it should be 14, then look and see if the axle has a bolt on pinion, if it does this would make it a full floater.
2. Remove hubcaps (where neccassary) and look at the end of the axle, if it has a flange with 8 bolts, instead of a "dead hub" like a car would have, its also a full floater, if not, it is a semi floater.
I beleive the front axle in all 3/4 ton diesel trucks was the larger of the two ifs axles (9.2" Ring Gear?) -- this im not sure about, but the rear axle, i know for sure.
Also -- a semi floater 14 bolt has a round shaped diff cover, whereas a full floater has more of an octagon shape to it.
14 Bolt Full Floater -- 10.5 inch ring gear, standard factory gear options (over all years) 3.42, 3.73, 4.10, 4.56
14 Bolt Semi-Floater -- 9.5 inch ring gear, not sure of available ratios
Both of these were available with gov-loc from the factory.
Bruce Ostien
02-20-2004, 11:54
Diesel 1995, It sounds like you know somthing about these axles. I have a 1999 3/4 Suburban with a G80 locking rear differential. I believe you were reffering to this locker as a gov-lock. The manual sayes to use GM only: 1052271 new part number: 89021671. This is an API GL-4 80w-90 gear oil ($7.39 /32 oz. container) I would prefer to run a synthetic gear oil (better for cold weather). Can I dump in any synthetic gear oil or will this screw up locker operation?
IF YOU HAVE A JOBBER WHO WILL TALK TO YOU THAT SELLS MOBIL 1 SYNTHETIC GEAR OIL, ASK THEM IF IT MEETS YOUR STANDARDS, THE GOOD ONES WILL KNOW. I RUN THE 75-90W MOBIL 1 FULL SYN. I PUT THREE OUNCES PER QUART OF LUBEGARD ADDITIVE TO THE MOBIL 1 AND FEEL READY FOR ALL THE PULLING AND 4 WHEELING I DO. NEVER HAD ANY TROUBLE YET. ALOT OF GUYS PUT THE LARGER CAPACITY MAGTECH DIFF. COVERS ON TO INCREASE THE AMOUNT OF FLUID AND REDUCE THE CHANGE INTERVALS
Thanks for the help folks. Another question to narrow it down a bit more...I've got the 14 bolt diff...how do I tell 10.5 vs 9.5 without taking it apart and measuring the ring gear?
P3 rear is different, so can't help there.
I replaced my drain plug w/a Fram brass valve unit (think I got it from Pep Boys, but I've seen 'em at all big chains) that has a replacement plug, a brass cap, and a screw-on extension hose that drops the empty location about 10". It keeps that annoying last dribble from blowing past the drain pan when I empty, and gives me more point blank aim. Missed the pan by a tiny bit once; what a mess. Anyway, the replacement stub has a copper washer and it is a permanent replacement for the plug. After I drain, I unscrew the tube, screw on the brass cap (nicely knurled) & voila.
Now if I could only eliminate the dribble-over when removing the filter...
Keith Richards
02-23-2004, 18:59
Barra, as diesel 95 was getting at,it's pretty easy to tell if you have the full floater"stronger"axle.It has a bigger ring gear10.5 inch.You can see that by looking at the diff cover.It comes to more of a point at the bottom. You can go look under a 1 ton dually or single rear wheel gm truck and see the same axle as you probably have. :
Keith, Diesel 95, Thanks! I should have read D95's post a bit more carefully...thanks for point it out, Keith. Turns out I have the full floater.
Cheers!
barra
diesel1995
02-24-2004, 16:47
Bruce, I beleive you would be fine going with any good quality synthetic gear oil (they often go hand in hand). The one concern i do have is that the part number that you gave is basically for a gear oil that comes with a limited slip friction modifier already added from the factory. This causes a few issues: i'm not sure that the gm friction modifier mixes well with synthetic oils, but I have heard somewhere that this is not neccessary when using synthetic oils, but you may wish to consult a gm service center before taking my advice.
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