What's the difference between the Sterling 10.25 and the 10.50 I know that 10.25 and 10.50 are the size of the ring gears, but I've heard there's a difference in the whole axle
and in the axle info section, they call all the stock rears 10.25, even the DRW. I thought that they made a 10.25 semi-floater, and the SRW full-floater was a 10.50, and the DRW was a 10.50
The 10.50 is an upgrade from the 10.25 that came in the late '90s. There was a good article about them in one of the off road magazines a few years ago. I will say that the Sterling 10.25 DRw is much lighter than the Dana 70 DRW. When I scrapped them. the Sterling was much easier to move around once I hoisted them onto my truck.
Steve
1970 F350 DRW Factory 9' Platform/Stake, 360, T18.
Passed on to new care taker July, 2013
The sterlings are lighter weight, but they hold up very well.
A 35 spline 70 is hard to beat, but I have yet to see a 10.25 sterling break under any condition that wasn't directly related to bad maintenance or someone not knowing what they're doing setting up gears.
One could easily upgrade his Dana 70 to a Sterling, at least on a DRW truck. The spring pads are the same, but the it is about 2" wider, which may or may not be a problem. Might get better brakes out of the swap too.
Steve
1970 F350 DRW Factory 9' Platform/Stake, 360, T18.
Passed on to new care taker July, 2013
FLATBEDFORD wrote:The 10.50 is an upgrade from the 10.25 that came in the late '90s.
Gotcha. So any Rear-end on a 80-86 F-350 Crewcab SRW or DRW will be a D70 or a 10.25, the 10.50 upgrade came later. Learn something new every day on FORDification