Reading this thread is giving me flashbacks to a process that I would prefer to forget.
Like you guys, my car had the pinion angle at -.5 degrees, Richmond 5 was down 3 degrees. The first issue I found was the floorboard sagging which apparently is a common issue on the fiberglass floor cars, my solution was to use 2 hockey pucks (!) between the BTO crossmember and floorboard to bring it back up level. That gave me the room to raise the tailshaft to just under -2 degrees.
I reworked the bracket with the 2 through bolts on the diff to allow the pinion to go up further and used a thinner bushing - ended up with @1.5 positive at the pinion.
Net result is no vibration and clearance for a 3" driveshaft, 1350 joints at trans, 1330 joint at pinion. The safety loop is close, but I still had to cut out a strip of the tunnel to clear it.
I can get some pics uploaded if it would help anyone.
Phil
Like you guys, my car had the pinion angle at -.5 degrees, Richmond 5 was down 3 degrees. The first issue I found was the floorboard sagging which apparently is a common issue on the fiberglass floor cars, my solution was to use 2 hockey pucks (!) between the BTO crossmember and floorboard to bring it back up level. That gave me the room to raise the tailshaft to just under -2 degrees.
I reworked the bracket with the 2 through bolts on the diff to allow the pinion to go up further and used a thinner bushing - ended up with @1.5 positive at the pinion.
Net result is no vibration and clearance for a 3" driveshaft, 1350 joints at trans, 1330 joint at pinion. The safety loop is close, but I still had to cut out a strip of the tunnel to clear it.
I can get some pics uploaded if it would help anyone.
Phil