limited slip question
limited slip question
hey,
anyone know of a limited slip option? i heard there was a way to put the VE limited slip in the VG tranny ... true or false? if so some links or some help
or is there just a limited slip option out there? im looking for something beefy!!
thanks
anyone know of a limited slip option? i heard there was a way to put the VE limited slip in the VG tranny ... true or false? if so some links or some help

or is there just a limited slip option out there? im looking for something beefy!!
thanks

biggest issue..the flexplates are different between the two engines, and are not swappable...there was some scuttle butt about the villager VG auto flexplate might work, but no one that i know of has ever tried it..
plus you will have a wiring nightmare to boot, not worth it imho....
good for everything, except being parked. does absolutely no good.
and for as jdmy as you are, I would think you would know a thing or two about cars.
probably think tiptronic is another term for DUI, huh?
ya man..i know 
biggest issue..the flexplates are different between the two engines, and are not swappable...there was some scuttle butt about the villager VG auto flexplate might work, but no one that i know of has ever tried it..
plus you will have a wiring nightmare to boot, not worth it imho....

biggest issue..the flexplates are different between the two engines, and are not swappable...there was some scuttle butt about the villager VG auto flexplate might work, but no one that i know of has ever tried it..
plus you will have a wiring nightmare to boot, not worth it imho....
it makes the car driveable.
when i stopped driving my Maxima and started driving the Civic... even though the civic has the most pathetic engine of any car i've ever been in, i was still getting tire-spin all over the place, even with 215mm tires (compared to 195mm stock).
What it does is uses a thick fluid and baffle plates to resist the wheels' ability to spin at different speeds. That means if one wheel's in mud and one's on pavement, in a open diff, the one on mud spins and the one on pavement doesn't budge. With a VLSD, the fluid forces the one over mud to slow down some, and the one on pavement to start spinning (albeit still not quite as fast as the one over the mud, but enough to get you unstuck hopefully)
and yes, Dead2Fall.. my VG has a VE-5 tranny bolted on to it. you just need either hybrid axles (ve inner joint/shaft, vg outer joint) or VE axles and VE hubs.
when i stopped driving my Maxima and started driving the Civic... even though the civic has the most pathetic engine of any car i've ever been in, i was still getting tire-spin all over the place, even with 215mm tires (compared to 195mm stock).
What it does is uses a thick fluid and baffle plates to resist the wheels' ability to spin at different speeds. That means if one wheel's in mud and one's on pavement, in a open diff, the one on mud spins and the one on pavement doesn't budge. With a VLSD, the fluid forces the one over mud to slow down some, and the one on pavement to start spinning (albeit still not quite as fast as the one over the mud, but enough to get you unstuck hopefully)
and yes, Dead2Fall.. my VG has a VE-5 tranny bolted on to it. you just need either hybrid axles (ve inner joint/shaft, vg outer joint) or VE axles and VE hubs.
Last edited by CapedCadaver; May 16, 2010 at 01:37 AM.
it makes the car driveable.
when i stopped driving my Maxima and started driving the Civic... even though the civic has the most pathetic engine of any car i've ever been in, i was still getting tire-spin all over the place, even with 215mm tires (compared to 195mm stock).
What it does is uses a thick fluid and baffle plates to resist the wheels' ability to spin at different speeds. That means if one wheel's in mud and one's on pavement, in a open diff, the one on mud spins and the one on pavement doesn't budge. With a VLSD, the fluid forces the one over mud to slow down some, and the one on pavement to start spinning (albeit still not quite as fast as the one over the mud, but enough to get you unstuck hopefully)
and yes, Dead2Fall.. my VG has a VE-5 tranny bolted on to it. you just need either hybrid axles (ve inner joint/shaft, vg outer joint) or VE axles and VE hubs.
when i stopped driving my Maxima and started driving the Civic... even though the civic has the most pathetic engine of any car i've ever been in, i was still getting tire-spin all over the place, even with 215mm tires (compared to 195mm stock).
What it does is uses a thick fluid and baffle plates to resist the wheels' ability to spin at different speeds. That means if one wheel's in mud and one's on pavement, in a open diff, the one on mud spins and the one on pavement doesn't budge. With a VLSD, the fluid forces the one over mud to slow down some, and the one on pavement to start spinning (albeit still not quite as fast as the one over the mud, but enough to get you unstuck hopefully)
and yes, Dead2Fall.. my VG has a VE-5 tranny bolted on to it. you just need either hybrid axles (ve inner joint/shaft, vg outer joint) or VE axles and VE hubs.
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