Jeep Axle: Dana 30 - - Jeep at Off-Road.com
Jeep »
Jeep Axle: Dana 30

Source: Jeep at Off-Road.com
New Page 1

BUY JEEP PARTS: Rear Axle | Dana 30 drum brakes | Dana 30 disc brakes | Jeep leaf springs | Jeep coil springs | Locking hubs (5- and 6-bolt)

The R&P ratio ranges supported by the carriers are 2.72-3.54 and 3.73-5.38 for the standard rotation and 2.73-3.54 and 3.73-4.56 for reverse rotation.

CJ Dana 30s

Early Dana 30s used a 11"x2" drum brake. Disk brakes were optional in 1976 and standard starting in 1977. Between '76-'78 the disk brakes used a large 10-1/2"x1-1/8" rotor. The "big brake" setup uses a 6 bolt caliper mounting bracket that goes between the knuckle and the spindle. The caliper is keyed to the mouting bracket and the rotor should apear wide when looking on edge. Rubber brake hoses with brass banjo fitting end. These rotors, calipers, and pads are compatible with the Scout II.

From 1979-1986 they used a 10-1/2"x7/8" rotor with a 2 bolt to knuckle caliper mounting bracket. From '79-'81 the caliper is keyed to the mounting bracket and uses rubber brake hoses with brass banjo fitting end. From '82-'86 the caliper is pin-bolted to the caliper bracket and the hoses are rubber crimped to steel line.

All Dana 30s from 1972-1980 use a six bolt locking hub. From '72-'78 the factory had Warn Premium hubs as an option. From '79-'80 the factory used Warn non-premium hubs stock. From 1981-1986 they use a weak Warn five bolt locking hub stock. Jeeps built in the 70s with the Quadratrac transfer case will not have hubs at all unless they have been converted to part-time operation. They have driven plates instead. Hubs should not be used with this transfer case unless it has been converted to part-time operation.

Another big difference between the CJ and Dana 30s used in later models is the CJ has the diff case offset on the passenger side and the later models have the diff case offset on the drivers side.

Most CJ Dana 30s will have lock-outs on the hubs to engage or disengage the wheel from the axle. With both hubs unlocked, the axles, u-joints, differential, and front drive shaft do not spin. This is done to increase gas milage, and if a locker is installed in the front diff, it will impove handling on the pavement. Later model Dana 30s either an axle disconnect system or no disconnect system.

The CJ Dana 30 uses the 5 on 5.5" wheel bolt pattern other models use the 5 on 4.5" wheel bolt pattern.

Outer parts (knuckles out) can be switched amoung to different versions of the CJ Dana 30. This means CJs with drum brakes can upgrade to disk and CJs with cheesy 5 bolt locking hubs can upgrade to 6 bolt locking hubs. Later models use different knuckles and ball joints that are not compatible to the CJ Dana 30.

Common gear ratios from '72-'75 were 3.73, from '76-'79 were 3.54, and from '80-'86 were 2.73

Wrangler Dana 30

Dana 30 YJ The YJ and the TJ don't use locking hubs. The YJ uses a troublesome vacuum actuated axle disconnect system. The TJ uses high quality bearings that have very low resistence so it doesn't use hubs or an axle disconnect system. Wranglers use and smaller rotor than the CJ. The TJ also uses a different pinion from the YJ. The TJ pinion uses a crush sleeve instead of shims. This difference made gear R&P selection for the TJ a bit limited at first.

Dana 30 CJCJ Normal cut Dana 30
Dana 30 YJYJ Reverse cut Dana 30

A strength of the YJ Dana 30 is its use of reverse cut ring and pinion. The ring and pinion are stronger when they are reverse cut in front axles. The reverse cut axle also provides better ground clearance and driveline angles.

Unfortunately, the TJ does not use the reverse cut Dana 30. It uses a normal cut Dana 30 similar, but not compatible to, the CJ Dana 30.

Dana 30 Axle Disconnect The YJ Dana 30 uses an axle disconnect system that is prone to failure. Often the vacuum hoses the activate the disconnect system will fall off or tear. Sometimes the vacuum motor won't have enough power to engage the sleeve when the gear lube in the disconnect housing gets gummed up. Another problem is that since only one axle is ever disconnected, an automatic locker or limited slip differential can cause problems with the axle and with handling. The drivers side axle is always spinning the differential.

. The TJ has done away with with the system completely which is good in that it is not likely to fail, but since there is no way to stop the differential from spinning, an automatic locker or limited slimp can degrade handling on the road.

The YJ and the TJ Dana 30 uses the 5 on 4.5" wheel bolt pattern. The YJ Dana 30 is of course set up for leaf springs and the TJ Dana 30 is set up for coil springs.

Comanche, Cherokee, and Grand Cherokee Dana 30

The Comanche (MJ) and Cherokee (XJ) use a reverse cut Dana 30 and the Grand Cherokee (ZJ) uses a normal cut Dana 30. Like the YJ and the TJ, these axles use a 5 on 4.5" wheel bolt pattern. All of these trucks use coil springs up front.

FSJ

The Dana 30 front axle was used for a short time from 1971-1973 in Cherokees (SJ), Wagoneers (SJ), and J-Series pickups.

Other Dana 30 Information

Here are some other articles related to the Dana 30.

Dana 30 Disk Brake Conversion: How to convert a drum brake Dana 30 to disk brakes. Some minor Dana 30 differences are documented in this article including differences in spindles, bearings, and brake hubs. This article also explains why the Dana 30 is a good low buck axle upgrade for '45-'71 CJs.

Specifications

Model/VersionSpring PadsWheel to WheelYears
Dana 30/CJ Narrow Track28"53"'72-'81
Dana 30/CJ Wide Track28"56"'82-'86
Dana 30/XJNANA'84-
Dana 30/MJNANA'86-'92
Dana 30/YJ31"60"'87-'95
Dana 30/ZJNANA'93-
Dana 30/TJNANA'97-

Contributors

Thanks to Joe Schaefer for the FSJ Dana 30 dates.

Follow us on Twitter at www.twitter.com/OffRoadDotCom
Comments and questions from our Readers
 Posted 2007-08-27 22:44:58.0
I have a 97 wrangler, not a mechanic but will try anything once so my question is how much work is it to change the ujoints that are on the outside of the front axle by the wheel. And is their a kit to just replace both sides so they will last awhile longer. I dont want to sound stupid but if i had some manual of book that shows me step by step detail i would rather do it that way so i am learning while i go. Thanks in advance for any help. Dave
 Posted 2008-01-09 21:05:00.0
i bought a jeep axle to put on my 93 grand Cherokee and the rotors from the old axle rub the wheel mount when i tighten the lugs and i don't know what the new axle came off of. the only thing i saw on it was that it's a dana and it had 30-7AF on the back of the differential. can anyone help me with this?
 Posted 2008-05-06 18:50:23.0
I`m setting up my front axle ( dana 30 rev rot.) in my wrangler with a set of 4:88 gears. Instead of playing guessing games, I`m trying to figure out if anybody knows the pinion gear depth variance on the 4:88 8 tooth gear. The number is usually etched at the head of the gear and mine doesn`t have it. Thanks
 Posted 2008-08-11 19:41:46.0
I have a DANA 30 front end with 4.56 gears and a ARB locker. Wondering what the going rate is for selling one....
Read More Comments
post a comment
Your email address will NOT be published.
appears with your comment
read our privacy policy
Note: does not support HTML
All comments submitted are subject to review, and may be delayed before posting. We reserve the right not to post comments.
Untitled Document
Sponsored Links
Off-Road Videos -
Check out over ten years of extreme 4x4 action, product testing and the Off Road Nation at play. Baja racing to rock crawling, ATVs in the sand to motorcycles in the dirt, it's all here. Rate them, share them and upload your own.
ATV Reviews -
Honda, Suzuki, Yamaha, Polaris, Kawasaki, Can-Am. First rides to long-term tests, check out the latest in ATVs, UTVs and Side-by-Side vehicles of every make and model. Read expert opinions and follow custom project vehicles.
Axxxtion Sports.....
Axxxtion Sports is heating things up with their 2010 Winter Heat snowmobile calendar! Simply Sexy!
JC Whitney: Parts and Accessories for Jeep

Enewsletters

Stay on Top of All the Action:
Sign up for Off-Road.com's Enewsletters

Source: Jeep at Off-Road.com,
Click here