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The cross shafts for the spider gears on the OS Giken diff end with these cams in the carefully shaped holes in the pressure ring.  When torque is applied to the diff carrier the cams force the half's of the pressure ring apart putting pressure on the LSD's clutch plates increasing the locking force.

 A Salisbury LSD allows good differential action (different wheel speeds) when there is minimal torque load; like when in the middle of the corner with a little throttle. As the throttle is applied more aggressively, the locking action is increased in proportion to the amount of torque applied to the ring gear. Thus there is more clamp load applied to the clutches locking the differential together under heavy acceleration and less tendency to spin the unloaded wheel with lower traction.

Tuning of a limited slip diff is little known subject and is critical for handling. The difference between a properly tuned differential over one off of the shelf can be several seconds a lap. We selected the OS Giken Super Lock differential for Project NSX because it is one of the most tunable differentials on the market and we are going to exploit its tuning capabilities to the maximum.

The first setting that we needed to select was the differential configuration. The OS Giken differential can be ordered in a 1-way, 1.5-way, or 2-way configurations. A 1-way differential’s cross shaft cam and the ‘ramps’ it sits in is angled to increase the clamp load on acceleration force while hitting a perpendicular wall under deceleration and thus not adding additional locking force under deceleration. A 2-way has identical ramp angles under both acceleration and deceleration which applies load equally when the torque is applied by the throttle and when engine braking applies load on deceleration. Finally, a 1.5-way applies more clamp load on acceleration than under deceleration.

The shape of the cam and the slot determines if the diff is a 1 way, a 1.5 way or a 2 way.  On our 1.5 way OS Giken diff the drive side of the slot has a more gradual ramp giving the diff more locking force in that direction than the flatter deceleration side of the slot.

 

On this 1 way Nismo diff on a FWD car, you can see the deceleration ramp of the pressure ring is flat providing almost no wedging force.

All of these configurations will significantly change the way the car feels. The 1-way LSD provides all the benefits from its locking ability on throttle while acting more like a stock open differential or Quaife/Torsen differential off throttle. 1-way LSDs are commonly used on FWD cars or on the front wheels of an AWD car. In this respect it causes the least amount of lock under deceleration and off throttle turn-in and entry into corners. When equipped to a RWD car it also has less understeer off throttle with more rear grip and stability.

The explanation of power flow through the diff is easier when looking at this picture of half of the diffs internals. The engine's torque spins the pinion gear which in turn spins the ring gear bolted to the differential case.  Slots in the ID of the case drives tangs on the pressure ring and the driven clutch disc's.  The pressure ring spins the spider gears through their cross shafts.  The spider gears are meshed to the bevel gears which are connected to the rear wheel axles through splines on their ID.  Teeth on the OD of the bevel gears are engaged to the driven clutch disc's in-between each each drive disc. When the bevel gears are spinning at different speeds as when the car is going around a turn, when power is applied,  the load on the cross shaft wedges the halves of the pressure ring apart, applying pressure to the clutch disc's and causing resistance to the wheels turning independently.  Whew!

A 2-way differential will lock equally under acceleration or deceleration. This makes the car drive more like a fully locked "spool" or go-kart rear end. A lot of rally racers and drifters prefer this sort of feel because the wheels don’t want to travel at different speeds and will either cause the car to go straight or break traction and slide easier and longer. 2-way LSDs often have too much deceleration lock for road racing/grip driving.

Case to ring gear bolts have been known to come off and when they do, the results are catastrophic.  Thus careful case prep is needed to ensure proper tightening of the bolts.  Here Billy Johnson deburrs and chamfers the holes for the case bolts in the diff.  You can see in the picture the light chamfering that is good.

 

Here Steve Mitchell chases the threads in the case with a tap to ensure clean threads for accurate torque readings.

 

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Comments

Drew
# Drew
Friday, September 11, 2009 8:44 AM
Amazing article Mike!
BenFenner
# BenFenner
Friday, September 11, 2009 1:30 PM
I learned a bunch!
JDMized
# JDMized
Friday, September 11, 2009 6:56 PM
A+.
I already knew this stuff, but it's great that someone in the business finally shed some light on one of the most important part of a car.
Keep the tech articles coming!
M-P
# M-P
Sunday, September 13, 2009 8:57 PM
Great article...picked up a few new bits of knowledge along the way. I am very happy to hear about the WPC treatment that gets rid of the low speed chatter. The Cusco RS (80% lock) that I had in my 350Z worked great, but was hell at parking lot speeds. I tried tons of diff oils and the only one that seemed to make it go away at all was Motul 90PA, but didn't eliminate it completely. I'm going to have to give WPC a shot next time.
Mike Kojima
# Mike Kojima
Sunday, September 13, 2009 9:21 PM
The Cusco RS has 12 clutches per side like the OS Giken. It also has negative pressure ring springs like the OS as well. Unless you use the diff for drifting, I would suggest switching to the stiffest pressure ring springs, WPC treating the clutches and deactivating one or two sets of clutches per side, while keeping the cone spring that came with the diff.

With our time attack car experience we have gained 1.5 seconds a lap in a turbo 350Z by tuning like this.

I am going to experiment with increasing pressure ring spring tension in drift cars as well to help with forward traction which is getting to be problematic as cars get more power and drift speeds get higher.
Mike Kojima
# Mike Kojima
Thursday, September 24, 2009 1:50 PM
Added a really simple viedo to show how a diff works!
Profusion
# Profusion
Wednesday, January 06, 2010 9:43 PM
Now do one on a clutch type? (Article)
stuntman
# stuntman
Monday, March 01, 2010 8:08 PM
revengemotorsports - a Salisbury differential IS a "clutch-type" limited slip differential.

The article is 4 pages of in depth background, function, and ways to tune a salisbury/clutch-type LSD.


Billy
mikoto
# mikoto
Thursday, October 14, 2010 1:03 AM
nice. good info. great!
EB Turbo
# EB Turbo
Thursday, March 24, 2011 8:44 PM
The cusco type MZ(don't hold me to it) has options in the spider case exchange between 1.5 and 2 way. Giving you more options with less parts. I have taken a used axle parted off the spines and welded a 19mm nut to the end. I put another used axle in the vise with both axle pieces and a digital torque wrench I can verify the proper Broadway torque i am looking for.
eimarshall
# eimarshall
Friday, September 30, 2011 8:27 PM
did you have the entire LSD WPC treated? or just the plates? I'd imagine you really just need the plates treated because they are subject to the most friction but i can see how it would help with the rest of the gears and such.

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