As I said in my last post (reply #2), I decided to keep the axle carrier pivot pin greased and leave it alone. But as I was preparing to continue with the right axle seals and put the axle shaft back in, I noticed that the carrier post, the part that goes up into the trunk and hangs from the mount, was up against the front of the hole in the trunk and that the inboard seat of the compensating spring (the horizontal one) was up against the cross-member that the front of the fuel tank bolts to in the back. This was guaranteed to make lots of noise.
There is a locating dimension for the carrier on the carrier bushing relative to the front of the pinion shaft flange that is supposed to position the axle fore and aft in the car. It is dimension “a” and is provided on page 35-0/1 of the Big Blue Book, but there is no sketch. On page 139 of the Haynes Manual, the dimension “a” is given as 158 ± 1 mm and is clearly shown in a sketch as the dimension from a straight-edge laid against the pinion shaft flange to the front surface of the carrier post, about and inch below the lower clamp plate at the top of the carrier post.
I conclude that it is important to get this dimension right, because it controls the fore and aft position of the pivot shaft bolt when positioning the axle using the rear axle centering “TOOL” that has been discussed so much and that is shown in the Driveshaft and Rear Axle / Rear Axle Section of the Technical Manual. It’s also probably impossible to adjust it after the axle is hanging from the carrier mount.
I had to drop the axle from the car because 1) the weight of the axle hanging on the pivot shaft bushing caused the carrier bushing to compress at the top front and bottom rear, throwing off the plane of the pinion shaft flange and 2) because the measurement point on the carrier post is up inside the hole of the body and therefore inaccessible. I dropped the axle (not literally) to measure dimension “a” and found it too big by 20 mm. It’s possible that my body restorer moved something when he removed the axle to put the body on a rotisserie, but it doesn’t matter anyway. It needed to be fixed.
To correct dimension “a”, the pivot shaft does not have to be moved, but the carrier must be moved on the carrier bushing. That requires loosening the two pinch bolts on the carrier so the carrier (6 above) can slide on the outer sleeve of the carrier bushing (5 above). I did one other thing to provide, hopefully, a few more years of life to that carrier bushing. I also loosened the single pinch bolt (4) at the front of the pivot shaft. Then while holding the carrier post approximately vertical, I used a pipe wrench (located on the outer sleeve about where the number 5 is in the above sketch) to rotate the carrier bushing 180 degrees inside the carrier and around the pivot bolt. That will put the rubber that is normally in compression, in tension and that which is normally in tension, in compression. Then I positioned the carrier post dimension “a” from the pinion shaft flange and tightened all the bolts. Make sure that the inner sleeve of the carrier bushing is still up against the washer (8a above). It took a bit of hammering to move the carrier on the bushing sleeve but within reason. If it works like I think, I won’t have to align the axle fore and aft – only horizontally using the locating strut.
I appreciate the advice provided in the above posts and am happy that I did not have to remove the pivot shaft and replace all the bushings. By the way, I’m also happy I did not have to replace the carrier bushing – the best price I found was for what I think was an aftermarket bushing in Europe at 86 Euro. Most all other sources were from $300 to 380 Euro. This is worse than restoring Ferraris.
Tom Kizer