I have been reading on the forum about identifying an LSD Diff by jacking up the car and spinning the wheels, then note the direction of rotation. Both my out of the car diff and the one in a local junkyard fail this test. One is way too covered in old oil to find any markings as well. I then came across this message from forum member Velocewest
"My '70 2800CS fails the "wheel spinning on jackstands test" too, but it has an LSD and will leave the same twin stripes as in Mr. Petrus' picture. I've yet to find a sideloader LSD that passes the off the ground test, including the recently rebuilt 40% 3.64 in my e12. That car lights up both rear 235/45's with ease, and on track days leaves no doubt the LSD is working. I don't think that's a good test for these older diffs.
Another thing you guys should be looking for -- on the older diffs, the "S" is not always a painted stamp -- on my cars, it's stamped with a metal die stamp, just like the ratio numbers, and it's only about .5" tall."
Does anyone know if this is accurate? Can a regular diff be made LSD with available parts? I think I'd like an LSD in mine and it is in no position to lay a patch at the moment.
"My '70 2800CS fails the "wheel spinning on jackstands test" too, but it has an LSD and will leave the same twin stripes as in Mr. Petrus' picture. I've yet to find a sideloader LSD that passes the off the ground test, including the recently rebuilt 40% 3.64 in my e12. That car lights up both rear 235/45's with ease, and on track days leaves no doubt the LSD is working. I don't think that's a good test for these older diffs.
Another thing you guys should be looking for -- on the older diffs, the "S" is not always a painted stamp -- on my cars, it's stamped with a metal die stamp, just like the ratio numbers, and it's only about .5" tall."
Does anyone know if this is accurate? Can a regular diff be made LSD with available parts? I think I'd like an LSD in mine and it is in no position to lay a patch at the moment.
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