Rear differential
I went from the 2.88 to a 3.31 and the improvement is very apparent. I like it.
Not sure if 2.88 to 3.07 would be a big enough change to justify the effort, personally.
Cheers
DD
Not sure if 2.88 to 3.07 would be a big enough change to justify the effort, personally.
Cheers
DD
Just keep an eye open on Ebay, Craiglist, the buy-sell section of this forum and others. Be ready to act quick. Typically they get snapped-up quickly.
I got super lucky and found mine in the classified section of Jag-lovers 5 minutes after beginning my search! The seller, who lives in Georgia, was even nice enough to personally deliver it to Coventry West for full overhaul. CW then shipped it to me.
Cheers
DD
I got super lucky and found mine in the classified section of Jag-lovers 5 minutes after beginning my search! The seller, who lives in Georgia, was even nice enough to personally deliver it to Coventry West for full overhaul. CW then shipped it to me.
Cheers
DD
6 and 12 cylinder cars used the same diffs....just different ratios. So no problem handling the V12 torque. They fit right in.
Cheers
DD
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"Worth it" very much depends on your personal goals and what you like. If I was doing highway cruising I wouldn't want a lower gear ratio, especially with the 3 speed transmission. I had an E Type and went from 3.54 to a 2.88 specifically to get quieter highway cruise with less heat and better fuel economy.
Just keep an eye open on Ebay, Craiglist, the buy-sell section of this forum and others. Be ready to act quick. Typically they get snapped-up quickly.
I got super lucky and found mine in the classified section of Jag-lovers 5 minutes after beginning my search! The seller, who lives in Georgia, was even nice enough to personally deliver it to Coventry West for full overhaul. CW then shipped it to me.
Cheers
DD
I got super lucky and found mine in the classified section of Jag-lovers 5 minutes after beginning my search! The seller, who lives in Georgia, was even nice enough to personally deliver it to Coventry West for full overhaul. CW then shipped it to me.
Cheers
DD
is the acceleration much more responsive or is it negligible. has it increased the fuel consumption?
i would imagine shecwould be running about 2500rpm at 60mph?
cheers
You can definitely feel a difference.
No regrets. I might have regrets if I did lots of travel out on the open highway but, to be honest, the car is quiet enough that getting adjusted to the higher RPM isn't a big deal.
2500 RPM at 60 mph sounds about right.
You'll need to change the speedometer gears to get a proper reading.
Cheers
DD
No regrets. I might have regrets if I did lots of travel out on the open highway but, to be honest, the car is quiet enough that getting adjusted to the higher RPM isn't a big deal.
2500 RPM at 60 mph sounds about right.
You'll need to change the speedometer gears to get a proper reading.
Cheers
DD
For more remarks on the 3.31 diff see posts 15, 25, 48, and 54 of this thread
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...tinued-177670/
Cheers
DD
https://www.jaguarforums.com/forum/x...tinued-177670/
Cheers
DD
The standard 2.88:1 diff with the GM400 three speed gives 70 MPH at 2,700 rpm. Fuel consumption will be worse. My own view is that an LSD is pretty important for the XJS is you are going to use the acceleration from rest - which if you want a bit more it sounds like you do!
My car will scrabble for grip in the dry at full throttle take-offs with the 2.88 diff as it is.
My car will scrabble for grip in the dry at full throttle take-offs with the 2.88 diff as it is.
Doug,
The speedo conversion sounds like a headache with the tranny in place and the drive pins etc.
Are you able to hunt down the drive pin part and give me a head start or give me a link to these parts if not much of a problem?
Cheers mate!
The speedo conversion sounds like a headache with the tranny in place and the drive pins etc.
Are you able to hunt down the drive pin part and give me a head start or give me a link to these parts if not much of a problem?
Cheers mate!
If you have the diff mounted speedo no conversion is needed, aside from making sure the new diff has the tone ring inside the housing. If it's a gear driven speedo, then it's the same as changing the gear in any Chevy TH400.
I used a GM adapter #1565208. You'll have to find a used one. BUT, actually, you'd first need to calculate the amount of correction you need in your application and work from there.
The local NAPA auto parts store helped me with the drive pin dilemma....but I'm on my first cuppa coffee so the details are a bit fuzzy at the moment. I'll report back.
You definitely need a angle drive adapter. Not enough room between the transmission and the transmission tunnel for a straight one.
A slight PITA, yes....but it's all doable. Tons of stuff and info out there to correct speedometer readings. Here's just one example:
800 Series Speedometer Drive Train Correction Adapter
Cheers
DD






