Time to put a fork in this one. I've put about 300 miles on since getting it back and the clutch is smooth as butter. No clicking or popping.
I decided to wait for another shops calendar to open up and left it with him (one man shop) for two days.. Evans 4x4 is a small Jeep only shop. He specializes in CJs, TJs and an occasional JK.. He had done the re-gear on my TJ and some suspension work and was the first shop I called when the NV3550 shit the bed but he was booked for weeks.
Rolling the clock back to early July.. The AX15 swap was feeling good, as was the clutch. I was hearing a very faint gear sound that I (wrongly) associated with the new AX15, since everyone says the AX has a very mechanical sound. It wasn't the gear box. It was the six month old National ToB that was installed when the AX15 went in back in November, starting to fail. In the process it was putting a gouge in the snout on the bearing retainer cap on the face of the transmission. As the gear box warmed the snout expanded just enough to cause the audible click as the ToB rode over the gouge.
Ultimately the National ToB imploded which is what left me stranded. And, when it did go it mangled the also new Mopar clutch fork.
From a brand new turn key Novak AX15 caused by a brand new National ToB...
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Looks like my straight edge is a little off on this one. But you get the point.
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Look at the gouge on the pivot ball cap. How do you miss this?
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Quick call to Dustin
@NovakConversions and confirmed the bearing retainer was in stock. $79 plus about the same for expedited shipping and we had it in-hand by 10AM the next morning. Changed the retainer, the fork pivot ball, clips & clutch fork. The clutch is a month old and in good shape as is the Mopar ToB.
300 miles later and it's feeling good.
Here's the real rub... The shop that did the AX15 conversion were the guys I had searching for the clicking sound. They pulled the transmission three or four times and overlooked the damaged clutch fork and gouging on the snout. To make things worse, Evan also found...
- The heads on the upper bolts in the bell housing were mangled. They are reverse Torx bolts and it looks like the shop used a 12 point socket instead. We replaced the bolts with new.
- Only one bolt was holding the starter in place. It had multiple washers on it because it was too long. The second bolt was a fine-thread bolt instead of the stock coarse thread and the threads in the bell housing are mangled. Evan installed a helicoil and new bolts
I get it.. I've been back to the first shop so many times for the transmission and they no doubt lost a ton of money on me.. they just wanted the Jeep off the lift and out of the shop as fast as possible. I'm no mechanic but as soon as I ran a finger over the snout I knew we found the issue.
The REAL rub is it was the snout on the NV3550 that had sheered in half. Three shops price gouged me saying the transmission was shot. It's eight bolts to get the bearing retainer off and a replacement for the NV is readily available.. $39. I am into this for nearly five digits since November and it might have cost a grand to fix the NV3550.
No regrets... everything from the fly wheel to the transfer case is new. The Jeep shifts awesome.
Thank you all for your suggestions and support. In the end, it was
@mrblaine who, in a DM, said.... "only thing left is the snout". I've never met Blaine, but we've spoken a few times. Big thank you to him for his wisdom.
Interestingly, Evan, the mechanic that fixed the Jeep is pretty rough around the edges. He can be really curt and is absolutely a no-nonsense guy. And, he
really knows his shit. Maybe an east coast Blaine doppleganger?