Can somebody help me figure out how to piece together the parts for a "Champ" quick-change center section for the Golddigger lakester? When Doug King built his modified roadster he cannibalized parts off the Golddigger lakester including the Halibrand Champ center section and side plates which fit the shortened Ford passenger car banjo rear side axle housings that came with what I bought. So I'm trying to figure out how to piece together a new center section.
From some research I've learned that there were 11 and 12 bolt center sections. Also that there are special side plates for those Ford passenger car axle housings are pretty rare, especially if you want ones that are not broken. I've seen indications that those side plates were made for both 11 bolt and 12 bolt patterns. Is
I've also learned that besides Halibrand, Winters and Frankland there were a bunch of other that made these rear setups including Jones and Franklin.
My immediate questions are:
1. Do they all have the same internal dimensions following the 39 Ford 3/4 ton truck rear end form factor? In other words will a ring and pinion or spool from one fit the others?
2. Did some of the manufacturers reinvent things like ring/pinion dimensions, bearing mountings, change gear parts to different dimensions?
3. Who did 11 bolt and who did 12 bolt side plate mountings? Who did both?
4. I've seen indications that those side plates were made for both 11 bolt and 12 bolt patterns. Is one likely to be harder to find than the other?
5. Does or did anyone ever make a ring and pinion ratio lower number (like 3.78 or 3.54) than the common 4.11?
6. Did anyone besides Halibrand produce a slider version?
I've rummaged around on the internet including the various manufacturers sites, HAMB and the old posts here and have not yet found the answers. In the street rod community the tendency seems to be to either find/buy a complete rear and avoid getting into the complexity of it all. I think this has all been well illuminated among the "roundy-round" folks. but I hardly know where to start there.
Any help will be much appreciated and will likely safe me some false starts.
Thanks, Ed Weldon