In
79-85 Toyota mini-trucks, 84-85 4-Runners, and 69-89 Land Cruisers, the
well-known weakest link in the front drivetrain is the Birfield joint inside the
enclosed knuckle. That's not to say that this joint is weak, because failure is
rare in stock rigs, but low gears, big tires, and powerful engines can cause
failure. Where other vehicles snap axles, Toyotas break Birfields, often when
you have the wheels cranked to one side and are applying power.
It was thought to be impossible to find a
stronger solution than the stock setup because of the limited space available
inside the closed knuckle... but Marlin Czajkowski, of Marlin Crawler fame,
found a better way and created the 'Marfield' Birfield joint. To
make a Marfield, Marlin fuses a special high-strength steel ring onto a Birfield
to prevent failure. The exact metal composition and welding technique are
hush-hush for obvious reasons. Unless you have the specialized welding
equipment, years of experience, and hours of time, as well as willingness to
trash hundreds of dollars worth of Birfield joints to perfect your technique,
you should call Marlin to order a set of his super-duty Marfield joints.
Installing Marfields requires absolutely no modifications - they bolt right in.
Marlin sells Marfields in three flavors, based
on the donor Birfield upon which Marlin works his magic: used, new aftermarket,
or new Toyota-manufactured. The prices varies accordingly, and is detailed in
Marlin's price
list. Marfields based on used cores carry a 6 month one-time replacement
warranty*, and Marfields based on new parts carry a 12 month one-time
replacement warranty* -- but keep in mind that nobody's been able to make a
Marfield fail yet.
Marlin
is so confident in his product that he's offering a bounty on the first broken
Marfield. Now this bounty, like the warranties*, applies only to his
custom manufacturing work, and not the stub shaft, splines, or drive axle. He'll
need the broken unit itself, a picture of whatever unimaginable predicament
resulted in failure, and a brief description of the circumstances. What's
the bounty? An ARB to fit a Marfield-equipped vehicle... That's how
confident he is.
Marlin disassembles, cleans, inspects, and
reassembles each Birfield that is destined to become a Marfield. The welding
that Marlin does traps the balls and cage inside the Marfield housing, which
means that you cannot take apart and rebuild a Marfield. You can still
solvent-wash them and regrease them, but you can't rebuild them. With their
strength and a good greasing, you should be able to set them, forget them, and
never worry about breaking them again.
Testing Marlin took his Marfield joints to a major test lab
to try to determine the force it would take to make them fail. He used a test
fixture to apply twisting force to the splines at the inboard end of the inner
axle shaft and anchored the splines at the outboard end of the Birfield joint to
a test table.
The attached table and graph show results from
these tests. Marlin started by testing a used Toyota Birfield in line (no
steering angle) with a stock inner axle. That Birfield joint did not fail; it
snapped two inner axles - one at 49,694 inch-lbs, and then another at 50,329
in-lbs. In the next test, a new aftermarket Birfield broke the stock inner axle
at 53,618 in-lbs.
Material
Test Results
UNIT
TYPE
STEERING INPUT (degrees)
FAILURE MODE
PEAK TORQUE (in-lbs)
NOTES
Used
Toyota (stock)
0
AXLE
49,694
test
1
Used
Toyota (stock)
0
AXLE
50,329
test
2, same birfield as used in TEST1
New
Aftermarket (stock)
0
AXLE
53,618
test
3
Used
Toyota (stock)
30
BIRFIELD
50,502
test
4, same birfield as used in TEST1 & 2
New
Aftermarket (stock)
30
BIRFIELD
42,191
test
5, same birfield as used in TEST3
Marfield
based on Toyota
30
AXLE
48,251
test
6
Marfield
based on Aftermarket
30
AXLE
58,236
test
7: using stronger Land Cruiser axle
*
These tests were supposed to break the Marfield!
Marlin
was trying to determine the yield strength for stock used Birfields and his
Marfield, and was surprised that the inner axles broke before the Birfield joint
failed. Marlin had never seen a stock inner axle fail before these tests. This
is a testament to the strength of these parts in a straight line, but since
breakage was the goal, Marlin cranked the Birfield over to a 30-degree angle
relative to the axle angle (beyond what the steering stops will allow when
mounted in your truck). Using the same Toyota-made Birfield that had already
broken two stock inner axles, Marlin finally broke a Birfield joint at 50,502
in-lbs. A new aftermarket joint bent to the same angle failed at 42,191 in-lbs.
Then
he put a Marfield onto a stock inner axle, bent it 30 degrees, and proceeded to
snap the inner axle at 48,251 in-lbs. Next he did the same test with a
late-model Land Cruiser inner axle (these have a better heat treat and are
stronger, but longer) and they broke that stock inner axle, too, at a whopping
58,236 in-lb. With the strongest axles he could find, Marlin was unable to break
a Marfield. The pictures show the Marfield that destroyed this hefty inner axle.
These
tests show several things:
Axle shafts have varying yield strengths.
Marlin recorded inner axle failure on mini-truck inner axle shafts at 48,251
in-lbs, 49,694 in-lbs, 50,329 in-lbs, and 53,618 in-lbs. The LandCruiser
shafts, with their better heat treating, pulled 58,236 in-lbs before
snapping. Marlin had never seen an inner axle shaft fail prior to visiting
the test lab.
Birfields will fail before the axles only
when angled sharply AND powered up. Stock Birfields are stronger than the
inner axles when kept straight (not steered).
Marfields are much stronger than stock or
aftermarket Birfield joints, and also stronger than stock mini-truck or late
model LandCruiser axles.
What this Means to You on the Trail
If you break a Birfield joint on the trail, you are
either in 2WD from there on, or, if you pack a spare, you are in for
approximately two hours of work. To swap a Birfield, you must completely tear
down the knuckle far enough to extract the broken Birfield and inner axle. In
the worst case scenario, the Birfield spreads out too far to be pulled out, and
you have to remove the kingpin caps and bearings, then remove the whole knuckle.
In the best cases, you "only" have to tear down the locking hub,
brakes, axle bearings, spindle, and inner axle, and then repack the housing with
grease. Even best case, it is a dirty, rotten job that you don't want to have to
do ever again.
Marlin proved that stock Toyota LandCruiser and
truck inner axles will fail before his Marfield joint. He also speculates that
the inner axle is stronger than the locking hub, which would be GREAT, because
that means that the hub will fail before wiping out the inner axle - and the
Marfield is too strong to fail at all. That means that if you carry a spare hub,
driveline breakage up front is only a fifteen-minute stop to swap a locking hub!
You don't have to jack up the wheel, strip down the brakes, axles, axle
bearings, etc.
*Limited Warranty only applies to the work
performed by Marlin Crawler. It DOES NOT cover the stub shaft, inner or outer
splines, inner drive axles, or any other mechanical or otherwise failures that
may be associated with this product.
Email:
Marlin Crawler 1543-B N. Maple Fresno, CA 93703 (559) 25-CRAWL; (559) 252-7295
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