Re: big problems
I've checked these in the junkyard, with the case on the ground. Find a driveshaft, or take a rear output yoke with you. Stick the shaft in the rear output with a bar through it. Find some bolts (or pins) for the front output and put a bar through them. Leave the input free to turn.
No, but it is intended to check the T-case, not the trans. The trans has to be in neutral for the test. The input must be free to turn.
Like almost anything, if one has a solid understanding of how something works, and is not guessing, or working with 'bad' information, then it's possible to come up with a diagnostic proceedure to figure out if it's OK or not.
Definitely guilty of working with bad info. I was under the impression that you needed to hold the input shaft as well. Shame on me for not thinking it completely through and relying on others.
Your method of checking in a junkyard would be reasonably simple. I'm a little annoyed that nobody managed to come up with that tidbit when it was discussed earlier (like I said, it was probably 2, maybe 3 years ago).
So, to summarize you really need 3 things to test a junkyard unit: Tcase to be tested, and a front and rear driveshat that fit the tcase (or other bits to engage the front and rear output shafts). Use the rear shaft as the lock (lay it 90 degrees to the tcase), stand on the tcase (unless it's still in the truck), and use the front propshaft as a gigantic breaker bar to spin things over. If things move really easy, VC is done. If it doesn't move at all, VC is done. If it moves some, but not easy, tcase is reasonably OK. Seems reasonably simple.
Thanks for the info. I've got a project that I'm thinking of now that will ultimately require a good 4472. This will help sort the good from the not so good. (oh, and maybe help the OP figure out whats wrong with his truck too).
'JustDreamin'