SoundGuyDave
This Space For Rent
- Joined
- Apr 9, 2007
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BIG difference between a Detroit Locker and a spool, though! At least with a Locker, you get the thing disengaged when you're off-throttle...
BIG difference between a Detroit Locker and a spool, though! At least with a Locker, you get the thing disengaged when you're off-throttle...
Not always & that is one of the problems. Driving with a locked rear end takes a lot more Finesse
A Torsen is – in my opinion – the best thing out there for cornering on pavement. No clutch pack to wear out & service regularly.
I heard down the grapevine that OS-Ginken might be developing a diff for the 8.8. If so, that might be something to seriously consider.
Anyone have details?
So...is that OS Giken diff going to be 2k, or 3k??? lol


Why is the Torsen preferred by so many over the TrueTrac? I know the Torsen won't hold up to drag racing and costs a lot more than the Eaton.
go for it bro!
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Torsen T2-R
I ran a Eaton before going to the Torsen T2-R. I found the Eaton to be less durable too. The Torsen is more money, but worth every cent!
I ran a Eaton before going to the Torsen T2-R. I found the Eaton to be less durable too. The Torsen is more money, but worth every cent!
In the olden days before limited-slip differentials were widely economical and available for small roadrace cars, a locked rear gear was just about the only option. If you had one in your Sprite you learned to drive it and you beat the guy with an open differential. In the associations where locked rears were illegal, part of tech inspection was to push your car around in a small circle; the shudder of racing tires being dragged across pavement was a giveaway.Dick head level = expert
No doubt - probably more retail
Stile - Probably the best diff available to average moes - like me![]()
...I heard down the grapevine that OS-Ginken might be developing a diff for the 8.8. If so, that might be something to seriously consider.
Anyone have details?
On the topic of spools: the issue with spools is that they do not work with modern tire technology for paved surface racing. But, if you are running in loose surfaces with plenty of power, or, you are running a tire that works at very high slip angles (think skinny Firestone racing tires in the early '60s up to the Goodyear Blue-Streak), then you can set up a spool to work. Drifting is an extreme example of that, but they also have tremendous wheel spin and go through tires at a rate that would be unacceptable in racing.
In the past spools were acceptable both because the tire tech was poor, and the alternative diffs were either open or rough lockers. LSDs were not developed and some other tricks (shimming the spiders) needed constant maintenance. But, LSD and tire technology have moved on. Now better lockers, decent clutch style and great Torsen style diffs are available to suit a huge variety of conditions. And paved surface tires are so much more advanced.
If you've read Mark Donohue's book, Unfair Advantage, he speaks about using the spool much longer after his competitors abandoned it. He says that the uneven handling of the brutal lockers available made the car impossible to tune and that it was easier to have a consistent (spool) instead of the locker. But even he and Penske abandoned the spool when they went to rear sports cars with aero.
Now THAT is bringing the tech!! I wish we had more of the above, and less of the "But it look whack, yo!" type of posts...