Thanks Joe. I have already ordered a new (MB hex shaped) flex-disc kit and was not looking forward to having to order a new centering ball bushing, thus extending the wait for parts. (somehow I have to figure out how to order $10 parts tiny enough to fit in a matchbox without paying $30 for shipping).
George, I have been trying to figure out exactly how to align the driveline to minimize the “flexing” of the flex-disc. The SLS site provides an excellent sketch but does not say HOW to do it. My plan is to install the flex disc to the transmission side then move the propeller shaft side up close to it and try to measure the thickness of the gap between the flanges all around. If the gap is equal, then the alignment should be correct – I think!
Does anyone know of an established "technique" of aligning the engine and transmission to the propeller shaft? I can't find it in the BBB.
General Comment regarding the driveline: Has anyone noticed in the EPC, in the SLS sketches or in the BBB, Chiltons, and Haynes manuals just how many iterations of propeller shaft and joint designs there have been over those years of the Pagoda? I suspect that MB had trouble getting it right during those years. That could explain the often short life of the flex discs. My experience working in the engineering of automobile drivetrains was that once you got a design right, you were really reluctant to change it. Likewise, if there arose a problem, you changed it quickly, often without verification because there is not much risk of changing something that doesn't work anyway. If, once verified, the solution didn't work out, you changed it again. Sometimes a bad design changed many times before it got fixed for good.
Perhaps in the interest of making our cars reliable, we should be a little less purist in replacing failed parts with identical parts, especially those parts that are difficult to see or on cars that are not subject to being judged.
Tom Kizer