I'm working on a truck for my boss, I pour concrete by trade, but am one of those jack of all's, so a U-joint replacement I assumed, ended up being a broken yoke with substantial rust and a bent driveshaft and damaged end where U-joint had to be cut out.
It looks like it had suffered this damage a while back in its history and instead of replacing the yoke and bent driveshaft, they just stuck it back in and hoped for the best.
I could be wrong but the damage looks aged and a few months back the driveshaft hit the highway and it has sat in the grass every since.
I have a new yoke and driveshaft to install, he said the transmission runs hot which could be a symptom of driving with a damaged drive train.
How can I find out before I do all this work if to much damage was done to make fixing it worth more time and money?
It looks like it had suffered this damage a while back in its history and instead of replacing the yoke and bent driveshaft, they just stuck it back in and hoped for the best.
I could be wrong but the damage looks aged and a few months back the driveshaft hit the highway and it has sat in the grass every since.
I have a new yoke and driveshaft to install, he said the transmission runs hot which could be a symptom of driving with a damaged drive train.
How can I find out before I do all this work if to much damage was done to make fixing it worth more time and money?
Apr 11, 2019 at 9:10 PM