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You cannot put a ratchet type locker in the front of a CAD equipped truck without disabling the CAD unit.
I don't run a no slip, but I do run Lockrights in my Samurai, and they hold up pretty well compared to a Detroit ez.
As to strength, they are gonna be EASILY as strong as your stock carrier. The weak link is usually the crosspin, but you will likely break an axle before you break the locker.
They do not "stop locking" if they break. They pop and clunk really bad. If the locker is not working, and looks in perfect shape, it was not installed correctly. edit: UNLESS both axleshafts have broken-and in a Toyota, that might be both BIRFIELDS have broken. BTW welcome Missouriman!
I have my doubts as to the smoothness of ANY ratchet type locker. I haven't run a No slip, but a ratchet locker by design requires "slop" to allow the ratchet mechanism to engage and disengage. I'd expect slop and torque steer, as well as the occasional clunk. Probably a lot smoother than a standard LR, but it's still a ratchet locker.
There was a discontinued ("gearless"?) "locker" that used pure clutchpacks and a "trunken v" that pressed the clutchpacks to power the axles. It is THE ONLY diff design that will fail to transmit power when excessive wear takes place. For instance a posi, when the clutchpacks wear completely out still transmits power to the axles, it just becomes an open diff. When the "gearless" clutchpacks wore out, the packs couldn't transmit power to the axles at all. They sucked, and were discontinued.
The no slip won't be stronger than a cheapo Lockright, it will just be smoother. In the rear they are ridiculously easy to install on the full floating axle. Pull axleshafts, diff cover, bearing caps. Pry out carrier, blast off ring gear, pull crosspin and spider/side gears. Install locker and put it back together. Don't even have to jack the truck up. Only hard part is muscling the carrier in and out.
I don't run a no slip, but I do run Lockrights in my Samurai, and they hold up pretty well compared to a Detroit ez.
As to strength, they are gonna be EASILY as strong as your stock carrier. The weak link is usually the crosspin, but you will likely break an axle before you break the locker.
They do not "stop locking" if they break. They pop and clunk really bad. If the locker is not working, and looks in perfect shape, it was not installed correctly. edit: UNLESS both axleshafts have broken-and in a Toyota, that might be both BIRFIELDS have broken. BTW welcome Missouriman!
I have my doubts as to the smoothness of ANY ratchet type locker. I haven't run a No slip, but a ratchet locker by design requires "slop" to allow the ratchet mechanism to engage and disengage. I'd expect slop and torque steer, as well as the occasional clunk. Probably a lot smoother than a standard LR, but it's still a ratchet locker.
There was a discontinued ("gearless"?) "locker" that used pure clutchpacks and a "trunken v" that pressed the clutchpacks to power the axles. It is THE ONLY diff design that will fail to transmit power when excessive wear takes place. For instance a posi, when the clutchpacks wear completely out still transmits power to the axles, it just becomes an open diff. When the "gearless" clutchpacks wore out, the packs couldn't transmit power to the axles at all. They sucked, and were discontinued.
The no slip won't be stronger than a cheapo Lockright, it will just be smoother. In the rear they are ridiculously easy to install on the full floating axle. Pull axleshafts, diff cover, bearing caps. Pry out carrier, blast off ring gear, pull crosspin and spider/side gears. Install locker and put it back together. Don't even have to jack the truck up. Only hard part is muscling the carrier in and out.