85 Z-51 polyurethane install! Surprising easy!
Hey gang!
My wife and I just pulled the 700R4 out of my Vette for a rebuild. We figured we'd knock out some other stuff since the car was apart. A lucky step in the tranny removal was removing the exhaust. It actually came off easily and allowed access to everything in the rear suspension. Four bolts was all it took to drop the spare tire carrier and get it out of the way. We dropped the entire rear suspension, including the differential carrier, the four control rods, the rear shocks, rear sway bar and rear tie rod assembly. To remove the rubber bushings, we used the home mechanic's standby: a vise and a couple of sockets. The differential carrier was the worst of the bunch. *EPA - Don't read next sentence* Once it was out of the car, I lit up the rubber bushings with a propane-cylinder torch. A heat gunmight have worked, but to me, it's not a complete project until you bring fire or a hammer! It pressed out easily after being heated up. We had to take out all of the metal insert flanges, the big "ring-like" ones. The small ones came out okay after pressing them out with the vise. The easiest way to get the ones out of the diff carrier was to saw a seam on the inside with a hacksaw blade. Naturally, be careful that you don't go all the way through and into the aluminum carrier. Once that seam was done, we popped the protruding edge with a flat punch (and hammer!). Once a decent edge was lifted, we clamped on some needle-nose visegrips and rolled it like a spam can. Once that edge was up, we tapped it again with the flat punch and hammer until it came out. The whole process of one insert was about 5 minutes. Once all of the new poly bushings were in, it took three of us about 5 hours to reassemble the entire rear end, including the differential carrier, axle shafts, tie rods, control rods, shocks, spring end links, sway bar, brake calipers, tire carrier and wheels. The car was supported on jackstands (rear only) and we used one floor jack. A really handy thing to have is a 3-foot rachet extension and 5/16 socket. You can get to the axle shaft straps EASILY once the rear tires are off. The neatest thing was how intuitive the whole process was. We didn't have to look at the book until we did the final bolt torques. Don't be afraid to do this... I'm a weekend mechanic and had never attempted anything like this and it went very well. We didn't need any special tools. I do recommend having a can of PB Blaster handy! It made life much easier. Oh yeah, while you're in there, change the u-joints too! Heavy duty ones that come without any grease fittings! Removing the exhaust gives you easy (well, easier) access to everything. I should also add that no blood sacrifices had to be made in order to satisfy the Bowtie Gods. Tackle this!! It wasn't bad at all.