Looking for a second set of eyes from guys who have done gears on S197s (especially 3.55 + Truetrac setups).
The car is my 2009 Mustang GT with New 3.55 Ford Performance gears new Eaton Truetrac New bearings throughout Raytech Solid pinion spacer (no crush sleeve).
From what I can tell, it looks like a good, usable pattern its just not "perfectly centered" heel-to-toe. I've heard Ford Performance gears can look like this and settle in after break-in.
Setup details:
Pinion preload: ~17–18 in-lb (new bearings and I'm running on the low side for road racing)
Backlash: right at .009 (checked in multiple spots, consistent)
Raytec solid pinion spacer
Pattern:
Slight bias toward the toe on both drive and coast
Centered vertically (not deep in root or running off face)
Good contact length across the tooth
Not sharp or edge-loaded
Main questions:
Appreciate any experienced input, I'm at the "button it up or chase it" decision point.




The car is my 2009 Mustang GT with New 3.55 Ford Performance gears new Eaton Truetrac New bearings throughout Raytech Solid pinion spacer (no crush sleeve).
From what I can tell, it looks like a good, usable pattern its just not "perfectly centered" heel-to-toe. I've heard Ford Performance gears can look like this and settle in after break-in.
Setup details:
Pinion preload: ~17–18 in-lb (new bearings and I'm running on the low side for road racing)
Backlash: right at .009 (checked in multiple spots, consistent)
Raytec solid pinion spacer
Pattern:
Slight bias toward the toe on both drive and coast
Centered vertically (not deep in root or running off face)
Good contact length across the tooth
Not sharp or edge-loaded
Main questions:
- Would you run this as-is for street + road course /track use?
- Does the slight toe bias concern you at all given the backlash is .009?
- Anyone running a similar setup (3.55 + Truetrac) seen patterns like this and how did it behave long-term (noise/wear)?
Appreciate any experienced input, I'm at the "button it up or chase it" decision point.




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