scraped down the paint behind the fill tube....S20BZ107.
Gear oil very much does expand. Around 10% at higher working temps. The air pressurizes significantly while the gear oil does not. Neither should find their way out of the axle while running.
That is because we're not working in the thousands of psi. Or even tens or hundreds.I've never seen an axle with a real pressure type seal like you find in hydraulics
On its own, this is against the laws of physics. If the higher pressure is inside the axle, pressure release can only occur to the outside of the axle. The only way for anything outside of the axle to makes its way into the axle is if the axle is at equal pressure or lower compared to the outside (and the seal is no longer functioning in some manner).The good can go out and the bad can come in.
On its own, this is against the laws of physics. If the higher pressure is inside the axle, pressure release can only occur to the outside of the axle. The only way for anything outside of the axle to makes its way into the axle is if the axle is at equal pressure or lower compared to the outside (and the seal is no longer functioning in some manner).
If this actually happened on a regular basis you would never hear the hiss when opening the axle.So what happens when the axle gets hot, the pressure leaks off
Since you do hear the hiss every time you open the axle the seals must successfully be holding in the pressure.A normal bearing type seal will not hold much pressure
Cooling the axle to the point of generating a lower pressure inside it than outside would require WAY more than washing it with some water. To raise the pressure the axle temperature goes up 100 degrees over outside temperature. To lower it equivalently you'd need to lower it 100 degrees. Since you create the heat inside the axle it travels towards the outside. But to cool it from the outside you need the cold to travel towards the inside. I'm thinking you'd need to dunk the whole axle in dry ice for an hour to get all the oil to swing 200 degrees.cool the hot axle
You have the ability to make localized changes to atmospheric pressure!?!? I totally need to know how you are "creating higher pressure on the outside" with soap and water.You create a higher pressure on the outside
Seriously?Looks to be a machined surface with no gaskets or seals
Interesting discussion. The MFWD on my 870 requires JD GL-5 gear lube. I wonder what changed over the years now that Lo-Vis Hygard is called for.