ddavisaf
15+ Year Contributor
- 2,588
- 81
- Feb 12, 2005
-
Langley AFB,
Virginia
I'm not where near this car right now, so I cannot look at it. I'll give you the info that was given to me and together we can figure everything out .
1995 Eagle Talon TSI, 6 bolt swap, 95 AWD drivetrain.
110 mph for about 1 1/2 hours near constant.
Noticed a burning smell, smelled like rubber.
Pulled over, checked the engine bay good, checked the underbody good, went to the back of the car and saw his rear diff on fire. Threw some water on it and called me.
At this time I asked him if he heard any kind of grinding or whining sounds before he pulled over. He said no. I told him to put the car in neutral and try and push it forward by hand. It rolled just fine. So, the rear diff isn't locked up.
He limped it to the next exit's gas station. Jacked up the car and climbed underneath. Inspected the exhaust hangers and diff mounts. The smell of burning rubber was alot more noticeable the closer to the problem area (Go figure right?). He then said that it looked like rubber was dripping onto the top of the diff. He finished driving it to wherever he was going. The next morning he calls me to tell me his diff is now leaking a small amount of fluid. So, here's where I'm at now.
I'm thinking he has to replace all the exhaust hangers and diff mounts. Also the inlet seal on the diff will have to be replaced along with the axle seals. My question is, as long as it's not making any problematic sounds, the diff is good correct?
1995 Eagle Talon TSI, 6 bolt swap, 95 AWD drivetrain.
110 mph for about 1 1/2 hours near constant.
Noticed a burning smell, smelled like rubber.
Pulled over, checked the engine bay good, checked the underbody good, went to the back of the car and saw his rear diff on fire. Threw some water on it and called me.
At this time I asked him if he heard any kind of grinding or whining sounds before he pulled over. He said no. I told him to put the car in neutral and try and push it forward by hand. It rolled just fine. So, the rear diff isn't locked up.
He limped it to the next exit's gas station. Jacked up the car and climbed underneath. Inspected the exhaust hangers and diff mounts. The smell of burning rubber was alot more noticeable the closer to the problem area (Go figure right?). He then said that it looked like rubber was dripping onto the top of the diff. He finished driving it to wherever he was going. The next morning he calls me to tell me his diff is now leaking a small amount of fluid. So, here's where I'm at now.
I'm thinking he has to replace all the exhaust hangers and diff mounts. Also the inlet seal on the diff will have to be replaced along with the axle seals. My question is, as long as it's not making any problematic sounds, the diff is good correct?


) and car would only go ~25mph (any more power and the diff would slip) for ~1/4mile at a time before my rear would heat up no power would be delivered to the wheels. Kept having to "rest/repeat" to get to my friends house 1 mile away. Yes my center diff fried during this whole "learning experience"
. I almost couldn't think after reading that part. I could only see ticket books and judges. If this helps, I would use a no contact digital pyrometer and after a test run I would check temps from axle to axle. If the differential is the hot spot and it's a limited slip, as was suggested before jack up one side and with trans in gear try to turn wheel to see if it turns or not. If it does, you are definitely going into the differential. Good Luck