TODAY is a Great Day to visit our Store and order the parts you need for your truck ! ! !
Close, Irish. First, a driveshaft's diameter does not need to be greater in diameter for a longer piece in order to transfer the horsepower: the horsepower you can transfer through a shaft is totally based on the diameter and wall thickness. The length doesn't enter into it.Where the length does enter into it is bending moment. A beam of any kind has a certain rigidity to bending. The deflection for a given force goes as the square of the length, so a beam twice as long will deflect four times as much for a given side load. This is why it is difficult to build clear spans in buildings: the beam sizes go up drastically as the span increases in order to limit deflection.i think this depends on how you look at it, cause im confused lol. and i dont know if im comparing apples to oranges but lets say you are using a 3/8" torque wrench and your torquing on it it will flex lets say you apply 100ft. lbs.. now lets put the same amount of torque on a 24"x3/8s extension the extension will twist and your torque your applying will go into that twist so your 100 ft. lbs. is only 85ft lbs.. now lets upgrade that extension to 1/2" you wont get the same amount of flex with the same amount of torque.When a driveshaft deflects (bends) under load you get vibration. The driveshaft can only be so balanced, and so true, particularly when built in an assembly line environment and maintained in local shops. U-joints have tolerances, too. Finally, engine and road vibration transfer to the ends of the driveshaft at the transmission and rear axle.The end result is that driveshafts can vibrate at speed. This speed is set up to be higher than the expected speed of the car. When building high-speed cars, stock driveshafts have to be replaced with higher-tolerance and more rigid units. Longer driveshafts vibrate at a lower speed than short ones, for the same reason that longer instruments make lower musical notes. Their frequency of vibration is lower.Excessive vibration in a driveshaft results in whipping, where the center of the driveshaft is moving excessively from side to side or up and down. This creates huge side loads on the U-joints and will greatly accelerate driveline failure. A two-piece driveshaft is used to increase the stiffness of the driveshafts by reducing the bending moment of each piece, thus increasing the speed at which excessive vibration sets in. This is most important in longer vehicles, where the necessary length of a one-piece driveshaft will bring the speed at which excessive vibration sets in down into the expected operational range of the vehicle.A two-piece driveshaft also has more weight, more complication, more components to fail, and greater horsepower losses in the drivetrain, so a one-piece driveshaft is preferred if the length of the driveshaft is short enough that the speed at which excessive vibration sets in is above the vehicle's operating range.why do some drag car use two piece and some use one? if you are using two you can keep the diameter small and the terminal velocity is raised higher than the one piece that has a larger diameter but then your adding weight and lose hp? but i guess that all equates to shaft length, weight, diameter, and rpmWith specific regard to our trucks, a short-box K has the shortest driveshaft, and the least need for a two-piece driveshaft. A long-box C has the longest driveshaft, and the greatest need for a two-piece driveshaft.so why would a hd truck have a two piece?
First, the bending moment. Let's say you have a 2x4 above a 6'wide window as a header, and it deflects 1/4" with load. Go to a 3' window, and the 2x4 will deflect only 1/16" in the center of the window with the same load, because you have cut the span in half, therefore you get one-quarter the deflection. The same thing applies to driveshafts. For a given driveshaft, and given side loads caused by vibration, the deflection will be one-quarter as much at the centers of two pieces as compared to the deflection at the center of a single piece driveshaft.Makes sense, i can understand thatSome drag cars use two and some use one because of trade-offs. You lose more horsepower in a two-pieces, because the extra U-joint introduces greater losses as it pivots back and forth as the driveshaft turns. You gain in resistance to vibration. There are other ways to address vibration, such as greater precision in machining the shaft and u-joints and in installing everything. But the biggest factor I think is length. Some of it may just be that people go with what they know and feel comfortable with.and thisAs for why a two-piece on an HD: Don't forget that driveshaft vibration is being driven by the vibrations of the engine and the axle. Stiffer springs and a higher torque/lower rpm engine on an HD means the vibrations at each end of the driveshaft are greater, and those are what drive the vibrations of the driveshaft itself. Also, an HD is more likely to be subjected to off-road or construction site conditions in which the driveshaft can be slightly dented or bent; these are less likely to cause excessive deflection in a two-piece where the pieces are only half as long because of the bending moment being reduced by 3/4.and thisYour torque discussion of the wrenches has more to do with a low-speed event, such as ductile failure of the driveshaft tube on launch. I used to repair driveshafts for trucks where the drive shaft was twisted in half, like twisting a tootsie roll in half, what we used to call a taffy failure. One-piece or two-piece, a low speed launch failure like that is dependent only on the cross-section of the tube and not its length: the tube is too small for the torque being transmitted. Length only enters in for high-speed failures of the driveline due to excessive deflection of the shaft due to vibration.the tootsie roll failer i can understand its dependent on the cross section, but isnt the cross section dependent on the length?
This has been covered here, HD trucks typically used 2 piece from what I have seen. Does your truck have 56" springs?
Cross-section is only dependent on inside diameter and outside diameter. Some manufacturers make longer driveshafts larger in diameter as well to try to reduce deflection, rather than go to a two-piece solution. That's a design choice, not a dependency.