Lavender? What are we, interior decorators?
Holden says Violet, and that's plenty good enough for me.
Here's what I think happened:
HK307 and 327:
Originally a Dark green tailshaft, part number 7439318. 2.75" OD, .065" wall thickness. 1" front universals, and 1" / 1-1/16" rear universals. (For the rear universal joint the 1" cups are in the tailshaft, the 1 1/16" cups are in the diff drive flange)
At some time in the HK model date range this was changed by recall to a Violet tailshaft, part number 2810283.
It is 3" diameter, .065" wall thickness, 1" front universals and 1" / 1-1/16" rear universals.
HT 350 manual version 1:
Violet tailshaft, as per HK recall/retrofit shaft, same universals as above.
HT350 Auto and HT308 manual:
Dark green tailshaft, as per original HK.
HT350 Manual tailshaft version 2, and also HT 308 manual:
Orange tailshaft, part number 2816742. I believe this was handled as a service replacement. It was 3" OD, but a thicker wall thickness than the Violet shaft, and had larger flanges as it used 1-1/8" cup front universals and 1-1/8" / 1-1/16" rear universals.
HG308M and 350M.
As per HT. The original HG parts book still specifies the Violet shaft for HG350 manual, so I'm guessing the orange shaft appeared after the HG release.
HQ350 Manual and Auto (Updated)
The standard shaft diameter is 3" and the wall thickness is .065". The shaft is longer than the HKTG Violet shaft.
The HQ350 manual shaft is Violet, and the auto and manual shafts are different lengths.
It uses the same 1-1/8" cup front universals as the orange shaft, and 1-1/8" cup rear universals, meaning the diff flange takes a larger cup than the HKTG type diff. (Which is completely different in most other ways as well).
The HQ350 manual does share its tailshaft and universals with the 1 Tonner.
As a bit of useless trivia, the HT/HG 350 manual shafts were not the largest diameter Monaro tailshaft, that honour goes to the humble 186S Opel shaft which was 3-1/4" OD. More because it was much longer than the rest, rather than due to the enormous power output of the 186S, or the extreme strength of the mighty Opel gearbox.
Edited by user Saturday, 22 August 2015 9:14:53 PM(UTC)
| Reason: Not specified