Gidday Matt
Yea been busy with the toy your dead right the best thing I can do is shorten things as much as possible to that end I've.. butchered the rear case half and milled it ready to be welded up

Oh and worked out how to sort out remote shifting the second box

I'm gona shift it using the transfer box shifter bolted on the front box
caught the tool shop on the way home this arvo didn't have my grinding wheels so I can't cut the spline yet
Got bored so I lowered the motor mounts and started welding all the bits I had tacked onto the frame, was gona strip the frame back and jig it so I could spin it as I welded

couldn't be bothered so I just started welding
From what I know and have read up on all this
UJ's are used on high angle driveshafts becouse they have a better range of travel than DC's but the trade off is the greater teh angle the worse the eliptical (fast-slow) rotation and are stronger becoase they are usually a larger cross than DC crosses
The DC joint minimises that eleptical rotation minimising all stress's associated with it.... these stress's can be a big issue on road going trucks
CV's to be honest I know bugger all other than they are supposed to be the most efficent at transmitting torgue and they have issues on extreme angles (go have a look at the posts on birfield joints on Pirate

) but I'm still keen to see if I can do some thing with them, mainly depends on how long the jiont is (longer it is the steeper it makes the angle

)
One other piont, there was a post that a driveshaft CV will take less punishment than a steering drive one and a comment about it only working on one plane....

this is wrong there is no difference (I know I'm gona explain this bad

but here goes...)
on the drive shaft you move in one plane of travel to the edge of its travel
now for the one in the steering axle you go down and then forward till you reach the edge of its travel... all you have done is vector (make an imaginery triangle, down forward and the straight line back to the start that coincidentally matches the movement of the single plane drive shaft

... well I understand what I wrote

Long travel slip jionts are no worry's all I'm gona do is get some treatable steel shaft mill it with the same slip joint splines as the standard slip joint I'll make this as long as needed I'll then cut the old female spline off the standard shaft and fit it to the end of a piece of tube on the new shaft the tube will be long enough to let all the male spline slid up inside

clever ha
Hopefully have the grinding wheels tomorrow morning so I can start tomorrow

another rain off
Cheers Reece