UDP Help

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

1993MTXSHO

Its a Taurus...
Joined
Feb 3, 2006
Messages
4,720
Reaction score
330
Location
Jersey
Install a larger snap ring.

While that seems promising, it's not 100% tested. Yes you know I have that done on my car as well, and am trusting it with a very expensive engine, so I'm not saying that's not the answer. But as long as you keep an eye on it, I see no problem in running one with or w/o a thicker snap ring.
 

1993MTXSHO

Its a Taurus...
Joined
Feb 3, 2006
Messages
4,720
Reaction score
330
Location
Jersey
Is there any way to prevent it? Welding?

That would fix it yes, however you have to have it balanced after. Also by doing that it defetes the purpose of having a damper, you'll get the same crank harmonics that you get with the solid pulleys. Crank harmonics scare me, especially on an engine that already has bearing problems which is why I run the UD crank with the damper in it. I just keep an eye on it and see if I see any scrap marks around the c-clip (sure sign of the glue letting go and the pulley spinning within itself).
 

gmorrell

Never been a noob...
Joined
Nov 28, 2000
Messages
806
Reaction score
540
Location
Colorado Springs, CO
Is there any way to prevent it? Welding?
Welding would be highly counter-productive.

Typing this explanation for the umpteenth time...

The OEM Ford crank pulley is a harmonic damper*, it has inner and outer masses that are separated by a layer of rubber that is bonded to both pieces. Its purpose is to dampen torsional vibration in the crankshaft, it does this by trying to shear the rubber layer between the inner hub and outer ring and essentially turning the vibration energy into heat. Damping crankshaft torsional vibration helps the crankshaft live longer.

ASP made their crank pulleys/dampers with two pieces, similar to Ford, but they used large O-rings to provide the damping layer, and the O-rings aren't bonded to the pieces, it's just a friction fit. Look closely at the inner hub here, see the O-rings?

Dsc01466

Unfortunately, all the power to drive the engine accessories has to be transmitted through this layer of O-rings, and eventually, they give up, and the outer ring slips with respect to the inner, driven hub. Once it starts to slip, it progressively gets worse until the outer ring starts moving about on the hub, and at that point, the whole mess is a paper weight.

* It is not a "Harmonic Balancer". One, there's no such thing, and two, if you use this term around me, I will put a horrible, disfiguring curse on your family that will last for 10 generations.
 

shopartsnw

SHO Medic
Staff member
Sponsoring Vendor
Joined
Apr 19, 2004
Messages
1,146
Reaction score
519
Location
Battle Ground, WA
Just to be clear (and make sure Gary does not curse my family for 10 generations)

The SHO Source UDP is an Under Drive PULLEY. It is solid, so it is not a Harmonic Damper, and it definitely is not a Harmonic Balancer.

There are many lengthy discussions on the pros and cons of a solid aluminum UDP if you search SHOforum and the internet in general if you want more information.
 

gmorrell

Never been a noob...
Joined
Nov 28, 2000
Messages
806
Reaction score
540
Location
Colorado Springs, CO
Now you guys got me all scared. I guess I'll just buy a SHOSource one.
Not trying to scare you, just making you aware of the issues and compromises. ASP doesn't make UDP's for SHOs anymore for good reason, they pretty much all fell apart.

If you're not doing forced induction and pushing 2X+ factory horsepower, the SHOSource solid under-drive crank pulley will probably not make a difference in crankshaft life.

Chop wood.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
107,077
Messages
1,181,198
Members
16,142
Latest member
Kaevorlly

Members online

Back
Top