where is or what's left of the pilot bearing / bushing? it looks to me like there was some sort of failure on it's part looking at the wear on the part of the shaft that goes into the crank, but the other thing is was the driveshaft thingey all the way in the forward position so that ALL the splines were meshed from the clutch disks and the driveshaft thingy?
Well, I should have taken a picture of that pilot bearing. Pfadt wants me to measure the carbon fiber driveshaft, so I guess I'll have to run back there sometime to do that. I guess I should have taken more pics while I was out there, but I was trying to not be underfoot too much.
Shane had speculated that Chris Harwood had put in the wrong carbon fiber drive shaft, so I contact Pfadt about it, and luckily the drive shaft was ordered directly from them, and they were able to find the order. Yes, the drive shaft was for a 2002 C5 Z06. But they still want me to measure it to make sure the correct one was SENT. Shane told me that the drive shaft being too long could likely cause the damage seen, but I'm having trouble understanding how such a thing could happen.
Anyway, I believe Shane said that the problem was that the drive shaft had moved too far FORWARD. I'm trying to figure out how that could happen. I thought that the slave cylinder bolts to the front of the torque tube, so does that hold the drive shaft from moving forward? Obviously SOMETHING must do that, but I just don't know what. I would think at the very least the pilot bearing would stop the shaft from going forward enough to eat into the crank. I watched the video of Chris Harwood having to hammer that bearing into the crank, so it's not like it would just slide in and out on it's own.
As for the driveshaft being too far BACK, heck, I don't know how it could do that either. There is a big snap ring in the back of the torque tube that holds the drive shaft solidly back there. So it shouldn't have been able to move in that direction at all. Aaron Scott told me that he verified that the carbon fiber drive shaft was still in the torque tube when he pulled the transmission and differential to be sent to RPM. I asked him to do that, as I really didn't trust Chris Harwood all that much by that time. As far as I can tell, you really can't tell the carbon fiber drive shaft is in there without removing that snap ring so you can pull it out to see it.
If the splines of the drive shaft weren't fully engaged in the clutch disks, then I would think the car would have made a hellacious racket with one of the disks flopping around. And the drive shaft would have been wobbling around like crazy since likely the shaft would not have been seated in the pilot bearing. Probably would have sounded like a bunch of cats being burned alive in a dryer.
But heck, I'm just trying to figure this all out, and having trouble putting the pieces of the puzzle together. And I'll be quite honest about it, none of this is making any sense to me.