Aftermarket CV Axle Recommendation

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May 12, 2019
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Can anyone recommend a better than usually made in China CV Axle? Need an axle for my daughters 2005 CRV. I cannot afford an OEM. $550 and up! Moog and TRW and others used to be a better quality part but no more I guess. Anyway, any ideas or personal experience with any certain brands you would recommend? Thanks in advance.
 
Well for Subies, the GSP Revolutions seem to be the best you can do as they at least get a TPE outer boot, but in my experience the inner boot still failed in 6 months

Re-booting OEM with TPE or quality rubber still seems to be the best option. Or install a better inner boot on a Revolution-- it's just annoying to have to immediately tear into a new product to bring it up to an acceptable level
 
I have Import Direct on my CRV for about a year, has like 5 year warranty
I've wondered about the Import Directs but I'm not convinced they use a better or heavier boot than anything else.

Warranty means nothing. A fresh steaming pile of dog poo is still a pile of dog poo.....
 
Find a local driveline independent shop with good reviews and ask if they can reboot it (if it's not making noise) or repair it for a reasonable cost (if it is making noise). Ask about their warranty. I have never bought an aftermarket or OEM axle assembly because I inspect monthly and reboot as needed. I can not recommend buying aftermarket based on what I've read about the experiences of those who have (which is limited to those who post a negative experience).
 
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I would check ebay for used low mileage oem axle. I had great luck with a $60 oem lexus axle from ebayy. There are lots of parts dismantlers on there.
 
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As Jdeere562 wisely said, cry once. Read these from my very recent experience with 'premium' aftermarket and then go buy OE:

Whats Missing

My post from another thread:
"Want my thoughts on "premium, OEM CV joint" half shafts from a reputable Porsche parts supplier?? :D

Car only has ~60K, but at 23 years the boots were at their end so I opted for new shafts. Hmmmm...60K on original shafts, 187 miles on a replacement then this. Current aftermarket parts quality is taking some fun out of the hobby.

PBSt52024.jpg
"
 
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Yeah, OE can be too expensive sometimes :(

Raxles is the best option if there are no aftermarket axles with TPE boots available for your CR-V


Well for Subies, the GSP Revolutions seem to be the best you can do as they at least get a TPE outer boot, but in my experience the inner boot still failed in 6 months

Re-booting OEM with TPE or quality rubber still seems to be the best option. Or install a better inner boot on a Revolution-- it's just annoying to have to immediately tear into a new product to bring it up to an acceptable level

Inner joint failure mostly only happens on Subarus because of the side-to-side movement of the engine. On a non-Subaru, neoprene is usually ok for an inner joint. In fact, some cars even use a neoprene inner boot from the factory (though the outer boot is still TPE)
 
Can anyone recommend a better than usually made in China CV Axle? Need an axle for my daughters 2005 CRV. I cannot afford an OEM. $550 and up! Moog and TRW and others used to be a better quality part but no more I guess. Anyway, any ideas or personal experience with any certain brands you would recommend? Thanks in advance.

I would second the idea that you call Marty at Raxles.com (y) He's been re-building honda axles since the early 90s and he definitely knows what he's doing! His part is better quality than what you can buy from Honda! No, I'm not kidding. I've bought axles for different Hondas from him and they're perfect! Price is reasonable too. Nowhere near oem pricing! I wouldn't bother with ANY aftermarket axles, no matter the claims. You'll be very thankful once you see how good they are. All he keeps (from used axles, OEM) are the forged shafts and he doesn't re-grind at all! Everything else is brand new and yes he includes the balancers!
 
Lots of missing information. Front or 4WD? How long will you keep the car? Will you replace it yourself or have a shop do it. Why do you think it needs to be replaced?
Actually NOT a lot of missing information for what I was asking and the question was quite simple. But if you must know to answer the simple question: FWD, daughter hit something and it bent the steel wheel and apparently bent the axle shaft, vibration from 20 to 30 MPH. Her first car, 210K miles. Need to last her the next 5 years(senior year in high school and 4 years of college), paying a shop to do the repair.
 
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FWD, daughter hit something and it bent the steel wheel and apparently bent the axle shaft, vibration from 20 to 30 MPH.
Have you replaced the wheel and tire already and it's still vibrating? Can't imagine bending an axle shaft from just that unless the wheel assembly got torn off the car.
 
Actually NOT a lot of missing information for what I was asking and the question was quite simple. But if you must know to answer the simple question: FWD, daughter hit something and it bent the steel wheel and apparently bent the axle shaft, vibration from 20 to 30 MPH. Her first car, 210K miles. Need to last her the next 5 years(senior year in high school and 4 years of college), paying a shop to do the repair.
I'd clarify warranty with any shop. If they just grab whatever is available from the big parts places, there's a real good chance one of the boots will be slinging grease again in 6 to 18 months.

I mention only because you said 5 years.

I discount reports of truck IFS shafts lasting longer. I don't why, but they do. I would say it has to do with lockouts, but only a VERY small minority of IFS ever employed or even can employ lockouts, although Ford's IWEs do allow BOTH shafts to disco from the wheels.

I ASSume thicker rubber is used for trucks. And for certain applications like Tacomas you can order shafts with TPE at both ends, even through O'Reilly.

Point being comparing longevity of aftermarket truck CV boots to passenger cars is apples and oranges. IME. YMMV!
 
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