Thanks Jesus......(lol...thats wild).....
I have been doing a lot of internet snooping and it really does seem like opinions on this are all over the place.
I bought the first u joints from Napa when I installed the shaft initially, in spring of 09........heavy duty truck units, greasable....and I greased them. The car hit the road at stock rear height (probably sagging a little) and then in the following winter (last winter) I added the add-a-leafs...left the ujoints alone.
That one was toast end of last season....to the point where it was flopping a bit in the yoke.....
Mind you, that is ONLY 8-10k miles or so, tops.
So, I know something went awry.....
Was it a bad ujoint? Note nough grease? Pinion angle? Damage due to vibration? Out of balance shaft?
I have a little vibration up around 42 mph, but I am pretty sure its engine and not driveshaft.
The replacement joint I got for the rear one (in it right now) is a sealed unit from AZone......I forget what brand they said it was but I remember thinking it was a good brand.....now I see the (original NAPA) front may be going.....
Because I lifted my rear end with add-a-leafs, the rear sits even higher than a superstock spring car equipped does.....so I am definately pushing the limit on the "stock" travel.......although because the rear springs are now pretty stiff, I cant imagine I have much in the way of axle wrap. So the u joint is operating most of the time at 6* or so.
I would rather not have to worry as much about u joints if all I have to do is shim the pinion.
Of course that brings the question of "what is the right setting".....Seems like generically people say 2-3* negative (downward) angle is what you want. Except when I search for "mopar" settings, then it jumps to 5-7*. But then some folks say that is for STRIP mopars and people use that setting in err for street cars.
My car isnt a strip car, a cruiser and the occasional get-on-it.....
Also, define 'top notch greasable u joint"....I have to dig up my old receipt and see what brand the napa unit was.....I paid extra to get the "heavy duty" greaseable one though.
When I do my rear diff swap I plan on going to the larger ujoint for the pinion side.....and have the shaft professionally gone over. I am also looking to have them check my front yoke and make sure it is tight enough....wondering if that is something they can do off the car....