Originally Posted by: HK1837 You wouldn't easily break Dana44's with a Falcon 6. Chevy Blazers, K2500's, Ford F150 etc with V8's used Dana 44's. The Overlander driveline is essentially 1973-4 Chevy Blazer except the Overlander used a Dana60 rear axle rather than a 44. Basically the same as a 1970's Jeep Cherokee as well, and I think the Jeep J250 truck used the Dana60 rear, which had 360ci V8's from memory. The Dana60 is the next size diff up again from 9" or 12-bolt, Ford used them in F250's.
The Aussie built jeeps were built from 1958 to 1968 that I know of and they could be optioned up if you had the balls up, to what they called a 'combat 6' where you got the huge power full Ford 6 cyl
just remember back in the day that Land Rover only had that crappy 4 cyl and people would toss them for a Holden 6 or Ford 200 6 cyl in the 70's and they would brake axles and diffs.
The front diff at the time first tested XY 4X4 was not a Dana 44 but must of been just what came with the Jeep chassis at the time, as the XY body was dropped on to such a chassis that was powered by nothing more that a 144 to 188 falcon engine and that was the high powered job of the Jeep at the time, I am not sure that the big 200 was an option in the CJ jeep but 144 170 and 188 was.
So the extra weight of the XT 4X4 with the high torque of the big 250 was too much for the original Jeep front diff and Ford had to order a bigger diff and that took a year before they got them diffs here in Australia.
So it held up the production of the XY 4X4 for 12 months. and they gave the falcon 4x4 all away because the XA ute body was not strong enough.
Maybe it was the unions back in them days that caused the delays down at the docks (they were real total morons back in them days), as when the Holden Overlander first came about the dude building them had a hell of a time the getting diffs and housings imported.
I remember back in the 70's on Fraser Island being driven back by a mad man in a Jeep,(it was fun) with what he said was a Ford XR 200 engine in it but it was a bigger type of Jeep then the CJ, a 230 Jeep I think they are called but they are called that many things and the Land Rovers mainly all had 186 in them one bloke even had a 202, I don't think that any more power was needed trying to hang on to something like that sure was fast.
A mates old man had a 6 cyl Land Rover engine puled down and it surprised me to see that this engine had one intake valve in the head and a exhaust valve in the block and that the piston top had a huge lump wave on it.