TODAY is a Great Day to visit our Store and order the parts you need for your truck!
Clunking with the engine fully warmed up at idle RPM or cold with the choke still partially closed? With engine fully warmed up at idle.Check the driveline u-joints to make sure they are tight with no visible evidence of rust tracks. Give them a shot of grease if they are greaseable. Then, with the park brake set, engine not running, and the transmission in neutral, check how many degrees of free rotation there are in the driveline, stop-to-stop. Check the condition of the transmission mount.
BD has the most likely answer, but....does it do the clunking while putting it into reverse? A lot of shift kits make the hit into reverse hit harder as a side effect.
2 or 4 wheel drive?
Have someone shift from inside while you listen to isolate the location. 👍🏻👋🏻E-Brakes are your friend...
I did what you suggested (to put gear in N, parking brake on, check the shaft to check movement), the shaft moves from stop to stop less than 4-6mm, very minimal movement.The transmission mount is factory original, have some cracks.I may need to change it, but it’s not causing the loud clunk noise.
Quote from: Captain J on November 15, 2021, 11:39:27 AMI did what you suggested (to put gear in N, parking brake on, check the shaft to check movement), the shaft moves from stop to stop less than 4-6mm, very minimal movement.The transmission mount is factory original, have some cracks.I may need to change it, but it’s not causing the loud clunk noise.You never answered the earlier questions: Does the clunk occur only when the engine is cold and idling fast or every time the transmission is shifted into reverse, both at operating temperature and cold? Are the u-joints tight and serviceable? Any evidence of rust tracks?Disconnect the rear driveline from the transfer case. With the transfer case in 2H and the transmission in park, using a pair of channel-lock pliers or similar to firmly grasp the transfer case output shaft, how many degrees of rotation stop-to-stop?
I should explain that the recommended checks are intended to determine whether there is excessive wear concentrated in a particular part of the drivetrain. Splined shafts wear, thus accumulate clearance. It is a normal process. Wear, however, is additive. Small amounts of localized wear in the various splined connections, when added together, become significant and audible. For instance, when changing the direction of rotation in the drivetrain, such as when shifting from a forward gear or park to reverse, the small amounts of play at each splined connection can add to produce a significant amount of rotation across the full length of the rotating assembly. The result? CLUNK! So follow the recommendations and you may be able to determine if there is one or multiple sources causing the symptoms.