(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts

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v8trev wrote:Will a rear axle from an 1800cc MGB cope with the power from a Rover V8 ?
(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts
Hi there so now i have a good answer for my xjs rear axle swap i will use the 2,88 diff, like this i could use the first lolmgbv8 wrote:v8trev wrote:Will a rear axle from an 1800cc MGB cope with the power from a Rover V8 ?
(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts
Yep!
As long as its the later Salisbury axle and not a banjo diff. If the diff has a rear cover plate then its the right one
The only difference between the 1800 axle and the V8 axle is the CW&P ratio. Everything else is the same. I've been using 1800 shafts in mine for years now.
You cant swap the CW&P to covert to V8 ratio on an 1800 axle without some machine work.
I actually prefer secondhand 1800 half shafts as the are well too heavy for anything an 1800 can chuck at it. So 30 year old shafts are well seasoned for V8 use.
If you fancy doing the conversion to V8 spec it will be cheaper to spend 500 notes on a converted axle from MGB Hive as an outright purchase. A V8 CW&P set will set you back around 400 notes and you then have to spend out on accurate machining of the diff cage to get it all to fit.
Stock V8 ratio is 3.07:1 and the normal 1800 is 3.9:1.
So if you have a 5 speed manual gearbox you will be fine for most things. But 1st gear will be hardly needed unless you want to pop wheelies
mgbv8 wrote:v8trev wrote:Will a rear axle from an 1800cc MGB cope with the power from a Rover V8 ?
(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts
Yep!
As long as its the later Salisbury axle and not a banjo diff. If the diff has a rear cover plate then its the right one
The only difference between the 1800 axle and the V8 axle is the CW&P ratio. Everything else is the same. I've been using 1800 shafts in mine for years now.
You cant swap the CW&P to covert to V8 ratio on an 1800 axle without some machine work.
I actually prefer secondhand 1800 half shafts as the are well too heavy for anything an 1800 can chuck at it. So 30 year old shafts are well seasoned for V8 use.
If you fancy doing the conversion to V8 spec it will be cheaper to spend 500 notes on a converted axle from MGB Hive as an outright purchase. A V8 CW&P set will set you back around 400 notes and you then have to spend out on accurate machining of the diff cage to get it all to fit.
Stock V8 ratio is 3.07:1 and the normal 1800 is 3.9:1.
So if you have a 5 speed manual gearbox you will be fine for most things. But 1st gear will be hardly needed unless you want to pop wheelies
Mine didnt !-------v8trev wrote:Will a rear axle from an 1800cc MGB cope with the power from a Rover V8 ?
(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts
truckdoctor wrote:mgbv8 wrote:v8trev wrote:Will a rear axle from an 1800cc MGB cope with the power from a Rover V8 ?
(I realise the ratios are different)
Thanks for your thoughts
Yep!
As long as its the later Salisbury axle and not a banjo diff. If the diff has a rear cover plate then its the right one
The only difference between the 1800 axle and the V8 axle is the CW&P ratio. Everything else is the same. I've been using 1800 shafts in mine for years now.
You cant swap the CW&P to covert to V8 ratio on an 1800 axle without some machine work.
I actually prefer secondhand 1800 half shafts as the are well too heavy for anything an 1800 can chuck at it. So 30 year old shafts are well seasoned for V8 use.
If you fancy doing the conversion to V8 spec it will be cheaper to spend 500 notes on a converted axle from MGB Hive as an outright purchase. A V8 CW&P set will set you back around 400 notes and you then have to spend out on accurate machining of the diff cage to get it all to fit.
Stock V8 ratio is 3.07:1 and the normal 1800 is 3.9:1.
So if you have a 5 speed manual gearbox you will be fine for most things. But 1st gear will be hardly needed unless you want to pop wheelies
Does this mean that the 2.8;1 ratio CWP from an xjs v12 will then fit this modified axle from MGB Hive? That is a nut and bolt change over and shim up ?
And what width from whell mounting to wheel mountingfaces.
Thanks Steve
Depends what gearbox you use and what ratios, even with a LT77 it should not be too bad, this is a good forum ask on here- https://www.mgexp.com/forum/mg-engine-swaps-forum.40/MikeFrost wrote: ↑Mon Sep 07, 2020 12:21 pm Hi,
Just found this thread as I'm about to do a V8 conversion to my MGB. V8 axles are out of stock everywhere and cost a lot more these days. Am I ok to run the standard B axle ratio? Only for road use, so will the final drive mean it's screaming it's sphericals off to get up to 70mph or will it be ok?