| A co-worker has a Mazda  RX-7 that was making a noise he couldn't identify.  I
listened to it and diagnosed a worn rear u-joint.  Off he goes to the parts
store and buys a replacement, and he and I set about replacing it.  When I got
under the car and looked, I saw that the bearing cups were retained by crimping,
rather than the usual circlips --- but hey, he had the replacement joint.  We
forced the cups out, then discovered that the replacement cups were way too
small to fit.  A recheck with the parts store and the Mazda dealer determined
that you can't replace the u-joints --- you have to buy a new drive shaft, at
$400 plus!   Jeez!  Talk about disrespect for the consumer!
Steve Byers
Havelock, NC USA
'73 Midget GAN5UD126009G  "OO NINE"
"It is better to remain silent, and be thought a fool
than to speak, and remove all doubt"  -- Mark Twain
----- Original Message -----
From HFC <froggi at cdsnet.net>
To: James Algar <JamesA@HI-TORQUE.com>
Cc: Spridget List <spridgets@autox.team.net>; 'Larry Cogan' <woodrat@spacey.net>
Sent: Wednesday, April 12, 2000 9:40 PM
Subject: Re: U Joint Zerk 70 Midget
> ...get this.  You can't even replace U's on a Mazda 929.  A tranny shop takes
> your drive shaft, cuts and modifies to accept  replaceable U-Joints!  Where's
> the logic here. I'm sure there are others like this.
>
> WFO
>
 |