Home » Public Forums » GMCnet » [GMCnet] Huh???
[GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 10:33 |
Ken Henderson
Messages: 8726 Registered: March 2004 Location: Americus, GA
Karma: 9
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My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
noise:
"In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
(NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
especially with the ripple."
SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
operation with MSO2?
Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
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Ken Henderson
Americus, GA
www.gmcwipersetc.com
Large Wiring Diagrams
76 X-Birchaven
76 X-Palm Beach
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336176 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 10:46 |
k2gkk
Messages: 4452 Registered: November 2009
Karma: -8
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MoS2 is, molybdenum disulfide which is a water insoluble lubricant. I have no idea as to what MS02or MSO2 are.
D C "Mac" Macdonald
Amateur Radio K2GKK
Since 30 November '53
USAF and FAA, Retired
Member GMCMI & Classics
Oklahoma City, OK
"The Money Pit"
TZE166V101966
'76 ex-Palm Beach
k2gkk + hotmail dot com
________________________________
From: Gmclist on behalf of Ken Henderson
Sent: Sunday, August 19, 2018 10:33
To: GMC Mail List
Subject: [GMCnet] Huh???
My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
noise:
"In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
(NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
especially with the ripple."
SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
operation with MSO2?
Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336177 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 11:21 |
James Hupy
Messages: 6806 Registered: May 2010
Karma: -62
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Ken, turn the radio up. If that doesn't work, try the MOS. I have used
both. Molybdenum is great stuff. Don't know much about it's ability to to
quiet gear whine, but if I had to guess, I would say that it is somewhat
limited.
Jim Hupy
Salem, Or
78 GMC ROYALE 403
On Sun, Aug 19, 2018, 8:34 AM Ken Henderson wrote:
> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
> anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
> to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
> others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
> noise:
>
> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
> (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
> deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
> defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
> binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
> the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
> characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
> the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
> valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
> especially with the ripple."
>
> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
> operation with MSO2?
>
> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336178 is a reply to message #336176] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 11:28 |
Ken Henderson
Messages: 8726 Registered: March 2004 Location: Americus, GA
Karma: 9
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Senior Member |
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Mac,
You're absolutely correct. But the erroneous "MSO2 Grease" has become such
common usage that "MoS2 Grease" is less used: 246,000 Goggle replies vs
233,000 for the correct term! Shamefully, I've subconsciously fallen into
using the wrong term. :-(
Ken H.
On Sun, Aug 19, 2018 at 11:46 AM D C _Mac_ Macdonald
wrote:
> MoS2 is, molybdenum disulfide which is a water insoluble lubricant. I
> have no idea as to what MS02or MSO2 are.
>
>
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Ken Henderson
Americus, GA
www.gmcwipersetc.com
Large Wiring Diagrams
76 X-Birchaven
76 X-Palm Beach
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336179 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 11:55 |
midlf
Messages: 2212 Registered: July 2007 Location: SE Wisc. (Palmyra)
Karma: 1
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Senior Member |
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Ken Henderson wrote on Sun, 19 August 2018 10:33My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
to try to quiet it a little.
SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
operation with MSO2?
Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
Molybdenum disulfide, MoS2.
It will run cooler. Not that it would be noticeable hooked up to an engine.
There will be less wear. although that has generally not been a problem.
However adding it will not hurt anything and it just might help with noise. If you decide to add the MoS2. Let us know how iif it worked.
Steve Southworth
1974 Glacier TZE064V100150 (for workin on)
1975 Transmode TZE365V100394 (parts & spares)
Palmyra WI
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336182 is a reply to message #336176] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 13:03 |
Larry
Messages: 2875 Registered: January 2004 Location: Menomonie, WI
Karma: 10
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Senior Member |
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k2gkk wrote on Sun, 19 August 2018 10:46MoS2 is, molybdenum disulfide which is a water insoluble lubricant. I have no idea as to what MS02or MSO2 are.
Subject: [GMCnet] Huh???
My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
noise:
"In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
(NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
deformation (3°7° twist or wrap and 0.30.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the IDVD
characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
especially with the ripple."
SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
operation with MSO2?
Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
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Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
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Well....DUH!!! Isn't it obvious Ken?
Larry
78 Royale w/500 Caddy
Menomonie, WI.
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336184 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 14:33 |
Anonymous
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The information you found sounds like someone was giving a lot gobble de gook or pseudo science.
I got a good laugh from it
Emery Stora
> On Aug 19, 2018, at 9:33 AM, Ken Henderson wrote:
>
> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
> anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
> to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
> others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
> noise:
>
> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
> (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
> deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
> defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
> binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
> the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
> characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
> the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
> valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
> especially with the ripple."
>
> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
> operation with MSO2?
>
> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336185 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 15:18 |
rjw
Messages: 697 Registered: September 2005
Karma: 4
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Senior Member |
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Ken Henderson wrote on Sun, 19 August 2018 11:33My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
noise:
"In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
(NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
deformation (3°7° twist or wrap and 0.30.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the IDVD
characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
especially with the ripple."
SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
operation with MSO2?
Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
Ken,
I think this explains it quite clearly:
"We establish the theory for perfect transmodal Fabry-Perot interferometers that can convert longitudinal modes solely to transverse modes and vice versa, reaching up to 100% efficiency. Two exact conditions are derived for plane mechanical waves: simultaneous constructive interferences of each of two coupled orthogonal modes, and intermodal interference at the entrance and exit sides of the interferometer with specific skew polarizations. Because the multimodal interferences and specific skew motions require unique anisotropic interferometers, they are realized by metamaterials. The observed peak patterns by the transmodal interferometers are similar to those found in the single-mode Fabry-Perot resonance, but multimodality complicates the involved mechanics. We provide their design principle and experimented with a fabricated interferometer. This theory expands the classical Fabry-Perot resonance to the realm of mode-coupled waves, having profound impact on general wave manipulation. The transmodal interferometer could sever as a device to transfer wave energy freely between dissimilar modes."
Richard
76 Palm Beach
SE Michigan
www.PalmBeachGMC.com
Roller Cam 455, TBI+EBL, 3.42 FD, 4 Bag, Macerator, Lenzi (brakes, vacuum system, front end stuff), Manny Tranny, vacuum step, Tankless + OEM water heaters.
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336186 is a reply to message #336185] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 15:27 |
rjw
Messages: 697 Registered: September 2005
Karma: 4
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Senior Member |
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Ken,
I think this explains it quite clearly:
"We establish the theory for perfect transmodal Fabry-Perot interferometers that can convert longitudinal modes solely to transverse modes and vice versa, reaching up to 100% efficiency. Two exact conditions are derived for plane mechanical waves: simultaneous constructive interferences of each of two coupled orthogonal modes, and intermodal interference at the entrance and exit sides of the interferometer with specific skew polarizations. Because the multimodal interferences and specific skew motions require unique anisotropic interferometers, they are realized by metamaterials. The observed peak patterns by the transmodal interferometers are similar to those found in the single-mode Fabry-Perot resonance, but multimodality complicates the involved mechanics. We provide their design principle and experimented with a fabricated interferometer. This theory expands the classical Fabry-Perot resonance to the realm of mode-coupled waves, having profound impact on general wave manipulation. The transmodal interferometer could sever as a device to transfer wave energy freely between dissimilar modes."
[/quote]
Sorry, I didn't include the link to the article I quoted:
Theory for Perfect Transmodal Fabry-Perot Interferometer
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-18408-5
Richard
76 Palm Beach
SE Michigan
www.PalmBeachGMC.com
Roller Cam 455, TBI+EBL, 3.42 FD, 4 Bag, Macerator, Lenzi (brakes, vacuum system, front end stuff), Manny Tranny, vacuum step, Tankless + OEM water heaters.
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336187 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 16:20 |
Richard Denney
Messages: 920 Registered: April 2010
Karma: 9
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Senior Member |
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Ken, Ken, Ken. Don’t tell me you’ve forgotten your Green’s Function for
solving inhomogeneous differential equations?
Actually, it’s research paper review time of year again. I’ll have half a
dozen of these to try to understand we’ll enough to refute.
(I thought your FD was new?)
Rick “evidence of nothing important left to study” Denney
On Sun, Aug 19, 2018 at 11:34 AM Ken Henderson
wrote:
> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
> anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
> to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
> others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
> noise:
>
> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
> (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
> deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
> defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
> binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
> the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
> characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
> the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
> valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
> especially with the ripple."
>
> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
> operation with MSO2?
>
> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
>
--
Rick Denney
73 x-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
Off-list email to rick at rickdenney dot com
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336189 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 18:08 |
Ken Burton
Messages: 10030 Registered: January 2004 Location: Hebron, Indiana
Karma: 10
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Senior Member |
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Ken,
What did you do?
Did you join facebook? I notice you did not give us the link.
Back in the 60's when we had a noisy differential, we use to cut up a few cork bottle stoppers and add them into the differential. A little bit of driving and they got ground up and mixed with the oil.
I am not sure of the long term effect, but I did do that to a 58 Chevy I had and I drove that car for another 3 or 4 years.
Ken Burton - N9KB
76 Palm Beach
Hebron, Indiana
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336190 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 18:13 |
George Zhookoff
Messages: 398 Registered: December 2004 Location: Snellville, GA
Karma: 6
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Senior Member |
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Ken
Are you sure whoever told you there’s a whine knew what they were listening to?
George Zhookoff
78 EL II
Atlanta
> On Aug 19, 2018, at 11:33 AM, Ken Henderson wrote:
>
> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to really DO
> anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering adding some MSO2
> to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I thought I'd Google for
> others' experience. Here's the only reply whose title seemed to address
> noise:
>
> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential resistance
> (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like ripple, twist,
> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The effect of
> deformation (3°–7° twist or wrap and 0.3–0.7 nm ripple amplitude) and
> defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the density functional tight
> binding theory and the non-equilibrium Green`s function approach. We study
> the channel density of states, transmission spectra, and the ID–VD
> characteristics of such devices under the varying conditions, with focus on
> the NDR behavior. Our results show significant change in the NDR peak to
> valley ratio and the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations,
> especially with the ripple."
>
> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
> operation with MSO2?
>
> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336194 is a reply to message #336186] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 20:16 |
richshoop
Messages: 190 Registered: April 2017
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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Thanks for the information, and education. Now I know why I only get 9.2MPG with our 75 Eleganza II
> On August 19, 2018 at 1:27 PM RJW wrote:
>
>
> Ken,
> I think this explains it quite clearly:
> "We establish the theory for perfect transmodal Fabry-Perot interferometers that can convert longitudinal modes solely to transverse modes and vice
> versa, reaching up to 100% efficiency. Two exact conditions are derived for plane mechanical waves: simultaneous constructive interferences of each of
> two coupled orthogonal modes, and intermodal interference at the entrance and exit sides of the interferometer with specific skew polarizations.
> Because the multimodal interferences and specific skew motions require unique anisotropic interferometers, they are realized by metamaterials. The
> observed peak patterns by the transmodal interferometers are similar to those found in the single-mode Fabry-Perot resonance, but multimodality
> complicates the involved mechanics. We provide their design principle and experimented with a fabricated interferometer. This theory expands the
> classical Fabry-Perot resonance to the realm of mode-coupled waves, having profound impact on general wave manipulation. The transmodal interferometer
> could sever as a device to transfer wave energy freely between dissimilar modes."
> [/quote]
>
> Sorry, I didn't include the link to the article I quoted:
>
> Theory for Perfect Transmodal Fabry-Perot Interferometer
>
> https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-017-18408-5
>
>
>
>
>
> --
> Richard
> 76 Palm Beach
> SE Michigan
> www.PalmBeachGMC.com
>
>
> Coop Roller Cam 455, Howell TBI + EBL, 3.42 FD, Quadra Bag, Macerator, Manny Tranny etc.
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> GMCnet mailing list
> Unsubscribe or Change List Options:
> http://list.gmcnet.org/mailman/listinfo/gmclist_list.gmcnet.org
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336205 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 22:07 |
fbhtxak
Messages: 191 Registered: April 2006
Karma: 0
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Senior Member |
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Ken,
Gear lubes, extreme pressure or otherwise, will do little to nothing to
reduce/eliminate gear noise. The noise usually is a result gear set design,
poor machining and wear. This is based on experience of engineers and techs
with upstream oil industry prime movers/gearsets as high as 250K BHP... And
also, on a more practical level, the experience/views of Corvette owners
https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums/c5-tech/3314396-what-gear-lube-for-a-wh
ining-set-of-gears.html
You're probably aware of this (from page 3C1, service manual X7725) "Final
drive gears are not absolutely quiet and are
acceptable unless some abnormal noise is present." This was written for the
OEM final drive but is probably applicable to your aftermarket final drive
as well. My OEM final drive had an annoying whine at about 40MPH. I bought
the GMC from the original owner with about 24K miles on it 25 years ago. I
mentioned it to him during my check ride with him. He said it was there
since new but the dealer told him "some noise is normal"... (I confirmed
that when I found it in the service manual). The noise did not change in the
next 116K miles when I had Cinnabar change it out for the GM 3.42 gear set.
To my surprise (and delight), the "3.42" has no annoying noise.
Fred Hudspeth
Fred Hudspeth
1978 Royale (TZE 368V101335) - Tyler, TX
1982 Airstream Excella (motorhome) - Cooper Landing, Alaska
On Sun, Aug 19, 2018, 8:34 AM Ken Henderson wrote:
> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to
> really DO anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering
> adding some MSO2 to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I
> thought I'd Google for others' experience. Here's the only reply
> whose title seemed to address
> noise:
>
> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential
> resistance (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like
> ripple, twist,
> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The
> effect of deformation (3??7? twist or wrap and 0.3?0.7 nm ripple
> amplitude) and defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the
> density functional tight binding theory and the non-equilibrium
> Green`s function approach. We study the channel density of states,
> transmission spectra, and the ID?VD characteristics of such devices
> under the varying conditions, with focus on the NDR behavior. Our
> results show significant change in the NDR peak to valley ratio and
> the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations, especially with the
ripple."
>
> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
> operation with MSO2?
>
> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
******************
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336208 is a reply to message #336205] |
Sun, 19 August 2018 23:56 |
jimk
Messages: 6734 Registered: July 2006 Location: Belmont, CA
Karma: 9
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Senior Member |
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Ken,
Did you think it might be the bearing at the output shaft.
Did the noise increase.
On Sun, Aug 19, 2018 at 8:07 PM, Fred Hudspeth
wrote:
> Ken,
>
> Gear lubes, extreme pressure or otherwise, will do little to nothing to
> reduce/eliminate gear noise. The noise usually is a result gear set
> design,
> poor machining and wear. This is based on experience of engineers and
> techs
> with upstream oil industry prime movers/gearsets as high as 250K BHP... And
> also, on a more practical level, the experience/views of Corvette owners
> https://www.corvetteforum.com/forums/c5-tech/3314396-what-
> gear-lube-for-a-wh
> ining-set-of-gears.html
>
> You're probably aware of this (from page 3C1, service manual X7725) "Final
> drive gears are not absolutely quiet and are
> acceptable unless some abnormal noise is present." This was written for the
> OEM final drive but is probably applicable to your aftermarket final drive
> as well. My OEM final drive had an annoying whine at about 40MPH. I bought
> the GMC from the original owner with about 24K miles on it 25 years ago. I
> mentioned it to him during my check ride with him. He said it was there
> since new but the dealer told him "some noise is normal"... (I confirmed
> that when I found it in the service manual). The noise did not change in
> the
> next 116K miles when I had Cinnabar change it out for the GM 3.42 gear set.
> To my surprise (and delight), the "3.42" has no annoying noise.
>
>
> Fred Hudspeth
>
>
> Fred Hudspeth
> 1978 Royale (TZE 368V101335) - Tyler, TX
> 1982 Airstream Excella (motorhome) - Cooper Landing, Alaska
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Aug 19, 2018, 8:34 AM Ken Henderson
> wrote:
>
>> My 3.55 final drive has a little whine under load. Not enough to
>> really DO anything about, but slightly annoying. So I'm considering
>> adding some MSO2 to try to quiet it a little. Before doing so, I
>> thought I'd Google for others' experience. Here's the only reply
>> whose title seemed to address
>> noise:
>>
>> "In this work, we present a study on the negative differential
>> resistance (NDR)behavior and the impact of various deformations (like
>> ripple, twist,
>> wrap) and defects like vacancies and edge roughness on the electronic
>> properties of short-channel MoS2 armchair nanoribbon MOSFETs. The
>> effect of deformation (3??7? twist or wrap and 0.3?0.7 nm ripple
>> amplitude) and defects on a 10 nm MoS2 ANRFET is evaluated by the
>> density functional tight binding theory and the non-equilibrium
>> Green`s function approach. We study the channel density of states,
>> transmission spectra, and the ID?VD characteristics of such devices
>> under the varying conditions, with focus on the NDR behavior. Our
>> results show significant change in the NDR peak to valley ratio and
>> the NDR window with such minor intrinsic deformations, especially with
> the
> ripple."
>>
>> SO, can someone please advise me whether to expect quieter final drive
>> operation with MSO2?
>>
>> Ken "With only an MSEE" H.
>
> ******************
>
>
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--
Jim Kanomata
Applied/GMC, Newark,CA
jimk@appliedairfilters.com
http://www.appliedgmc.com
1-800-752-7502
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jimk@appliedairfilters.com
www.appliedgmc.com
1-800-752-7502
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336209 is a reply to message #336208] |
Mon, 20 August 2018 06:38 |
Ken Henderson
Messages: 8726 Registered: March 2004 Location: Americus, GA
Karma: 9
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Senior Member |
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Thanks to all for the advice. I'm gonna try the MSO2 (MoS2).
Re: The quotation I included. If you REALLY want more of those erudite
discussions, Google "MoS2" -- you'll be rewarded with lots of them. I've
finally figured out where all that comes from: The authors are all
furriners writing in what they THINK is English. They don't realize that
most of us are so poorly educated that we can't understand one sentence of
it! :-)
Jim, I don't think it's bearing noise nor that it's increased. Nor that
it's really anything to worry about. I'm going to try the MoS2 and will
let you listen to it at Amana.
Ken H.
On Mon, Aug 20, 2018 at 12:57 AM Jim Kanomata wrote:
> Ken,
> Did you think it might be the bearing at the output shaft.
> Did the noise increase.
>
>
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Ken Henderson
Americus, GA
www.gmcwipersetc.com
Large Wiring Diagrams
76 X-Birchaven
76 X-Palm Beach
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Re: [GMCnet] Huh??? [message #336620 is a reply to message #336175] |
Sat, 01 September 2018 15:59 |
Paul Nadel
Messages: 9 Registered: May 2013 Location: Lakeland, Fl
Karma: 0
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Junior Member |
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A few years ago I tried Royal Purple oil in the manual trans of my Jeep JK. The change in noise and shifting was significant. I now use their products in all my vehicles, including the GMC.
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