Hello all!
Well, I had the first chance in 9 months to visit my baby today. I have to say, the first time I got in and sat down (didn't get a chance to start or drive), I fell in love all over again.
Just a quick update to my driving condition, I procured a VERY cheap jeep, so the healey can be my DD on sunny days only.
Now on to the information that I do have. I did the wheel to flange test. Jacking up one side of the car, I spun a wheel (P185-80R13, not that it matters for this test) as close to one rotation as possible. The car was out of gear, and I watched the driveshaft turn. I found it turned approximatly 2.5 (maybe higher +.1, but not 3 like a 5.9 would require) times for one full rotation of the wheel.
Using a formula on page one, this shows a gear ratio of around 5?!? Any chance I can throw that in my Jeep
This also tells me that the rear end is not locked. Honnestly, I'm getting a little confused as to what happened back there. I know my 2.5-2.7 number is accurate, so my 4500RPM around 50mph is accurate. As an extra measure, I brought a GPS with me to check my speed when I get her running.
So here's the question. When I start her back up on saturday, my plan is to drop some oil into the engine through the spark plugs, manualy turn the shaft (probably by putting in first and hand rolling, if I can). Then I'm going to change the oil.
Should I change the gear oil? What else before the first start?
Ok, assume now that I have a running Healey. What do I do about this rear end? Since the last time I posted here, I got a chance to play around with the rear end in my Jeep, which is basically just a supersized version of this one. Therefore, I feel MUCH more comfortable working on the rear end.
Can I just change out the gears back there for a normal ratio? Besides the gears, everything looked to be in excellent condition.
How much of a project is the gearing going to be? I have to do all of this in a storage unit, so space is going to be my biggest problem.
I guess I'm hoping for some suggestions to my rear diff issue before I move on to other stuff.
Ben