Gunnibronco wrote:I'm assuming you'll stay stock width if you swap to a HP. So you'd have to cut down the full width axle housing.
Yeah, I plan to stay stock width. Yep i would plan to cut down the full width axle and set up the pinion and caster at that time.
There are 2 full width axle housings they are probably both getting harder to find. I imagine they might be. I have seen some people find them lately though, so at least i have time to find one.
77 & earlier F150- these are the most desirable they are thicker wall tubing, and the wedges are welded to the tube. Note: I recently bought a D44 "from a 78 Bronco" that was this style. It was probably an early 78 production Bronco that got a left over 77 housing. So as with everything Ford, don't assume based on model year.
That is the idea age bracket that I am hoping for, haha now to find it.
78/79 F150/Bronco- these are probably easier to find, but have a thinner wall and funny cast wedges. The tubing does not continue through the wedge assembly. This makes them harder to change the length. Someone said you can just cut the long side down to get to EB width, but I think this will put the diff under the oil pan. With only a 4.5" lift this could cause problems.
I think I will avoid these years as I dont want to go down the road of retuning an axle so it lines up correctly.
I've picked up 2 of the early housings for $100 each with no knuckles. I was lucky and got my "78 Bronco" axle with knuckles and brakes for $150. Keep an eye on Craigslist, FB Marketplace, etc and you'll find one eventually. Someone might rob the knuckles and brakes for their EB and sell off the housing- that's how I got one of mine.
This would be ideal to find just the housing as I think I could use all my current parts and then upgrade the locker and maybe axle shafts for now and then get some chrome molly shafts with the 760 u joint.
The 76 knuckles should work. They seem to have the same outer shaft length as the HP axles. The HP knuckles do allow for a larger/stronger axle u-joint. I don't know if your 76 EB knuckles can use the larger u-joint.
Rox Crusher wrote:Hey Zen
To me your decision is a no brainer. I say this based on the assumption you will be changing gear ratio due to tire size and that you will be installing a locker.
Find an HP44 from a 76 or 77 F150 and cut it down to EB width and rotate Cs and wedges. Don’t forget that Duff arms have 4 degrees of cast built in, some people say that is enough.
The beauty for you is that you can have the new axle built and ready to install and then just transfer your new parts over to the new axle.
I just bought an HP44 axle and planning to do the same.
I know a guy that cut down an HP44 out of 78 and newer rig. He is in Albuquerque and wants 375 for it. Ping me for contact info if your interested.
Justin wrote:I'm biased, but would suggest the HP44. As Jeff suggested, I went with the 76/77 housing. Instead of cutting it down, I just got a matching rear, but that's not everyone's cup of tea. The HP front end is stronger, as it runs the gear in the correct direction compared to the LP. It also eliminates concern about flex and ability to travel. I can run mine at full droop, and shouldn't have binding issues that would absolutely be there with a LP setup. I found mine in a local junkyard, I think for $150 with the stock radius arms still attached. That was a bunch of years ago, but I'd probably pay up to $350 for one now if it was in good shape. They've gotten less common and more desirable. I'm also willing to scrape Craigslist for months looking for a killer deal, so your mileage may vary.
phyler wrote:I've seen the 76/77 axles going for $6-700 and still need to be built. If you come across one for sub $400 it's a good deal.
I see guys getting $250-300 just for the disc brake setup off those and the 78/79 axles.
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Justin wrote:No need for new wheels for a full width 44 swap if you go with 76-77 f150 stuff. I'm still 5x5.5. Theyre only about 4-6" wider. Opens up wheel selection a little though. I run 4.75" backspacing, which you can't do with stock width axles.
Jesus_man wrote:I am agreement that the HP44 is the way to go. If you want simplicity, buy off the shelf arms. If you want to be able to have more control over caster, get some DOM and joints and make your own.
Digger wrote:I would vote HP44. The pinion placement is better.
With a 3.5" lift, my pinion u-joint angle is almost perfectly straight, which makes the front spin vibration free.
Keep an eye on the pick-n-pulls. I see 76-78 Fords there once in a while with HP44s
Zenzone wrote:Side question= will my EB 76 calipers, and spindle/hub assembly fit on the older f150 axles that had drums if thats all I can find?
Digger wrote:Zenzone wrote:Side question= will my EB 76 calipers, and spindle/hub assembly fit on the older f150 axles that had drums if thats all I can find?
I don't believe so. The Ford disc brakes uses a large 5-bolt spindle. The drum brakes used a small 6-bolt spindle. You can do the Chevy disc brake swap with 6-bolt spindles.
Zenzone wrote:Digger wrote:Zenzone wrote:Side question= will my EB 76 calipers, and spindle/hub assembly fit on the older f150 axles that had drums if thats all I can find?
I don't believe so. The Ford disc brakes uses a large 5-bolt spindle. The drum brakes used a small 6-bolt spindle. You can do the Chevy disc brake swap with 6-bolt spindles.
So it sounds like if I get a drum axle high pinion I would have to use my current knuckles off my 76 disc axle along with my current 5 bolt spindle? Would my current knuckle fit the high pinions inner C's? I believe it would....
Thanks
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