Snapped driveshaft
Author
Discussion

Calza

Original Poster:

2,068 posts

138 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
I'm struggling to explain this one..



A friend was pulling off his drive, heard a noise. Then the clutch would no longer engage any gears. That picture is the result.

It hasn't been hit, there was no obstructions on his drive and the wheel moves freely (nothing else is damaged).

How on earth?

Edited by Calza on Monday 16th January 19:34

shake n bake

2,221 posts

230 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
How old? What is it? Is it modified? Has he owned it long?

curlie467

7,650 posts

224 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
It can happen. Simple as that really.

Calza

Original Poster:

2,068 posts

138 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
shake n bake said:
How old? What is it? Is it modified? Has he owned it long?
It's a 2004 1.6 Civic, totally standard with around 100k.



curlie467 said:
It can happen. Simple as that really.
I really didn't think they snapped like that! Fair enough.

daemon

38,899 posts

220 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
curlie467 said:
It can happen. Simple as that really.
+1

I'd one snap some years ago. Was even weirder than that as it was a clean vertical break.

Can happen

Actually - i've had it happen twice - a Signum 3.0CDTI and a Rover 216GTI.

Edited by daemon on Monday 16th January 19:41

Mound Dawg

1,925 posts

197 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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It all looks very rusty...

DKS

1,841 posts

207 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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I've heard of a 1.6 Civic doing exactly the same thing!
Looks very rusty for a 12 year old car.

Flooble

5,738 posts

123 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
Could someone who knows explain to a non-engineer how the driveshaft snapping stops the gears engaging? I'm genuinely intrigued, I figure there is still a bit of driveshaft sticking into the gearbox and with the wheels not rotating I wonder how that is different to normal?

rallycross

13,692 posts

260 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
Flooble said:
Could someone who knows explain to a non-engineer how the driveshaft snapping stops the gears engaging? I'm genuinely intrigued, I figure there is still a bit of driveshaft sticking into the gearbox and with the wheels not rotating I wonder how that is different to normal?
The gear will still engage but the diff is open so it sends the power to the wheel with the least resistance - hence not moving

Jonesy23

4,650 posts

159 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
The big pile of rust that fell out and the way it snapped suggests it corroded to death from the inside and eventually gave up.


marmitemania

1,571 posts

165 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
My mums Rover 400 snapped its driveshaft, if you look closely the break is right where the rubber harmonic damper is, water sits between the rubber and the driveshaft and rots it, contrary to popular belief about Rovers in all the years she had it this was the only rusty bit on it and the only major thing to go wrong with it also. They are cheap enough and very easy to replace.

aka_kerrly

12,498 posts

233 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
DKS said:
I've heard of a 1.6 Civic doing exactly the same thing!
Looks very rusty for a 12 year old car.
The lower arm does look rather crusty.
A mate's Civic type R snapped a driveshaft to, when reversing out of the garage at walking pace...ooo the massive torque @1500rpm;)



Spangles

1,441 posts

208 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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Flooble

5,738 posts

123 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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What sort of warning would you get of one of these failing?

Freds

947 posts

160 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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I imagine the car has spent a good part of it's life near the coast ?, it looks to have seen plenty of salt .

C12HLL

97 posts

210 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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I will take a guess at a civic sport? The shafts snapping on these is very common. You should be able to get a replacement from Euro or a local motor factor ok.

No real rhyme nor reason but working in a factors these have started snapping with worrying regularity.

paintman

7,852 posts

213 months

Monday 16th January 2017
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Flooble said:
What sort of warning would you get of one of these failing?
None. Excessive corrosion with deep pitting might be a warning that replacement would be a good idea.
Some years ago a friend & I were overtaken by a wheel. Followed almost immediately by a brand new Ford Capri on 3 wheels.
Shaft had snapped & the hub etc were still attached to the wheel.

Looking at the pics I would expect fitting a replacement drive shaft would resume normal service.

Flooble

5,738 posts

123 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
paintman said:
None. Excessive corrosion with deep pitting might be a warning that replacement would be a good idea.
Some years ago a friend & I were overtaken by a wheel. Followed almost immediately by a brand new Ford Capri on 3 wheels.
Shaft had snapped & the hub etc were still attached to the wheel.
Oh dear, that's not great but funny story!


marmitemania

1,571 posts

165 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
Flooble said:
paintman said:
None. Excessive corrosion with deep pitting might be a warning that replacement would be a good idea.
Some years ago a friend & I were overtaken by a wheel. Followed almost immediately by a brand new Ford Capri on 3 wheels.
Shaft had snapped & the hub etc were still attached to the wheel.
Oh dear, that's not great but funny story!
A driveshaft snapping on a modern front wheel drive car is not dangerous, you just lose drive the reason the wheel came off the Capri is because the Half shaft which had snapped had the wheel hub attached to it, although the bearings that hold it into the hub must have been shot also. I explained in my post above I have seen this on cars before and its where the rubber harmonic damper traps water and detritus between it and the shaft and rots it out, they always break in the same place.

*Al*

3,830 posts

245 months

Monday 16th January 2017
quotequote all
That looks totally rusted, I'm not surprised at all.