Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Moderators: FORDification, 70_F100
- morganater
- New Member
- Posts: 214
- Joined: Tue Sep 14, 2004 11:47 pm
- Location: Alaska, Anchorage
- Contact:
Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
I am not sure of the rear end ratio in my truck but i know it has been gone through recently . I have 295/50/15s and at right about 70 MPH (ESTIMATE) i am at 3,000 RPM's in my 460. NOT a highway truck IMOP. Can anyone estimate my rear-end gears (are they high, or is it my tires that are so short) I know there is a calculator for this somewhere or does anyone know
1969 f100 swb ranger 460 - parting out
1968 f100 swb 429 - decking out
94 Jeep I6 Back-up vehicle
reppin' AK
1968 f100 swb 429 - decking out
94 Jeep I6 Back-up vehicle
reppin' AK
- ak-1970-360
- New Member
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 2:19 am
- Location: Alaska, Palmer
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
i couldnt tell ya the gears but i just asked the same thing and if ya look where i asked it could help ya
- heep70
- 100% FORDified!
- Posts: 2039
- Joined: Mon Sep 13, 2004 11:03 pm
- Location: Washington, Bonney Lake
- Contact:
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Lift the reareand of your pick up off the ground. Turn the tire one full rotation and count how many times the yoke turns. The last spin the yoke makes will more than likely not be a full rotation. You will have to guesstemate that part. Example: 3-3/4 rotations of the yoke is a 3:73 R&P
If the rearend is open there is a chance that you will need to only lift one side of the pick up and spin the tire. If the yoke spins more then 5 full revalutions then do only one side off the ground.
Let us know what you find.
If the rearend is open there is a chance that you will need to only lift one side of the pick up and spin the tire. If the yoke spins more then 5 full revalutions then do only one side off the ground.
Let us know what you find.
Greg
1971 F250 "Highboy". SOLD to "Highboy_Firefighter_71"
2000 Subaru Outback limited.
2000 F250 4X4 PSD SuperDuty Crew.
2010 Polaris 800RMK Dragon 155"
2013 Polaris Pro 800 RMK 163"
1980 Built Toyota "Trail Rig".
My last 1971 "Highboy" pics
1971 F250 "Highboy". SOLD to "Highboy_Firefighter_71"
2000 Subaru Outback limited.
2000 F250 4X4 PSD SuperDuty Crew.
2010 Polaris 800RMK Dragon 155"
2013 Polaris Pro 800 RMK 163"
1980 Built Toyota "Trail Rig".
My last 1971 "Highboy" pics
- willowbilly3
- 100% FORDified!
- Posts: 1591
- Joined: Mon Jul 19, 2004 7:38 pm
- Location: Black Hills
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Simple math. Mile in inches (63360) divided by tire circumfereance in inches (probably about 78 for your tires)=812 tire roations per mile. Divide 812 ( or your actual value) into your engine rpms per mile(your rpms at 60 mph) and you have the gear ratio.
Great ideas have always encounter violent opposition from mediocre minds.
-
- Blue Oval Fan
- Posts: 628
- Joined: Tue Jul 20, 2004 2:52 am
- Location: Texas, Houston
- Contact:
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Should be a 3.50. I'd verify though...MK
1968 F-250 / 300 six / T-18
Dana 60 - 4.10 Limited Slip
Dana 60 - 4.10 Limited Slip
- DuckRyder
- Moderator
- Posts: 4925
- Joined: Mon Jul 19, 2004 3:04 pm
- Location: Scruffy City
- Contact:
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
http://www.4lo.com/gearratio.htm#
You need exact numbers (use 1.00 for the tranny and crawl) but based on a nominal 295/50/15 from
http://www.powerdog.com/tiresize.cgi
it is a 3.39. (one would expect that your numbers are off and it is actually a 3.25 or 3.50)
Get your exact RPM with a tach and exact speed with a GPS or calculate from stopwatch between mile markers and the calculator will get you close enough to figure out which ratio it is.
You could also get your tire size closer by looking up your brand and size on tirerack.com if they sell it.
You need exact numbers (use 1.00 for the tranny and crawl) but based on a nominal 295/50/15 from
http://www.powerdog.com/tiresize.cgi
it is a 3.39. (one would expect that your numbers are off and it is actually a 3.25 or 3.50)
Get your exact RPM with a tach and exact speed with a GPS or calculate from stopwatch between mile markers and the calculator will get you close enough to figure out which ratio it is.
You could also get your tire size closer by looking up your brand and size on tirerack.com if they sell it.
Robert
1972 F100 Ranger XLT (445/C6/9” 3.50 Truetrac)
"An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." -- Jeff Cooper
1972 F100 Ranger XLT (445/C6/9” 3.50 Truetrac)
"An unarmed man can only flee from evil, and evil is not overcome by fleeing from it." -- Jeff Cooper
- morganater
- New Member
- Posts: 214
- Joined: Tue Sep 14, 2004 11:47 pm
- Location: Alaska, Anchorage
- Contact:
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Sounds like a 3.50 to me. I do have a tach so those #'s are pretty accurate. hmm this gives me more reason to install some nice 4.10s with a powertrax locker
1969 f100 swb ranger 460 - parting out
1968 f100 swb 429 - decking out
94 Jeep I6 Back-up vehicle
reppin' AK
1968 f100 swb 429 - decking out
94 Jeep I6 Back-up vehicle
reppin' AK
-
- New Member
- Posts: 26
- Joined: Sat Aug 07, 2004 9:46 pm
- Location: North Carolina
re: Questions on Highway speeds/RPM and rearend ratio
Actually - it gives you a reason to install a 2.89 rear. 4.11's will run you at 3500 rpm at 70 mph. A 2.89 would put you at 2500 rpm at 70 mph.
But who the heck wants a 2.89 rear? Leave the rear alone and get taller tires - or a new transmission - or a gearvendors overdrive unit! :twisted:
John
But who the heck wants a 2.89 rear? Leave the rear alone and get taller tires - or a new transmission - or a gearvendors overdrive unit! :twisted:
John