3 quarts
Sounds about right. It will be at about 4700RPMs at 60MPH in 5th.
Its the gear that connects the speed sensor shaft to the transmission
no .. Having a seized drive shaft would be like just having the brake on .. will still go in gear .. just wont move ..
Check the gear on the cam shaft, you can see it through the hole that the distributor mounts in.
It could, if they have the same gear box.
7.2 ft lbs as per the Yamaha repair manual
A drive shaft is hooked to the transmission and turns when the vehicle is in a gear position other than park or neutral. The turning drive shaft helps the rear axle turn the rear wheels so the car can move.
when the car engine is start and the driver shift a gear,the power front the engine transfer to the drive shaft and its transfer the torque or power to the axle shaft the move a wheel.
Turn the drive gear 1 complete turn, and count how many times the driven gear turns. For example, to figure out the rear end gear ratio if the drive shaft turns once and the rear turns 3 and a half times you have a 1:3.5 gear ratio. This means the rear wheels turn 3.5 times for each one turn of the drive shaft.
A gear drive uses gears to drive the camshaft vs a belt or timing chain. Some bikes use a shaft drive vs a chain that is often confused with a gear dive.
Remove drive shaft holder clamps round by the gear box undo off hum get wishbone down and pull drive shaft out
gear and pinion drive