Universal Joint Cross

Overview

The Universal Joint Cross — also referred to as a spider, journal cross, or Cardan cross — is the primary flexing element in a propeller shaft assembly, transmitting torque between yoke ears across intersecting shaft axes under continuous angular articulation. The component operates in a cyclic bending and torsional load environment simultaneously.

For this reason, the cross demands:

  1. Controlled trunnion geometry for accurate bearing seat fitment.
  2. Sufficient surface hardness on trunnion journals to sustain needle roller bearing contact fatigue.
  3. Adequate core toughness to resist torsional and bending fatigue at the journal roots.
  4. Consistent surface finish to maintain sealing integrity at bearing cup interfaces.

At Sumex Auto Tech, UJ Crosses are produced through a defined sequence of CNC turning, milling, drilling, induction hardening, centreless grinding, and coordinate-controlled final inspection — maintaining dimensional and metallurgical consistency across production batches.

Why Dimensional Precision in UJ Crosses Matters

A common failure mode in driveline UJ crosses is premature needle roller bearing fatigue caused by trunnion diameter oversize or surface roughness outside the bearing manufacturer’s specification — leading to edge loading, stress concentration, and accelerated wear. Equally, undersize trunnions introduce bearing cup rattle, vibration, and early de-lubrication of the needle complement.

At Sumex, trunnion OD tolerance is held to ±0.005 mm at final inspection, centreless ground to the bearing seat Ra specification, and verified batch-by-batch before dispatch.

Key Manufacturing Parameters

Feature
Specification / Method
Trunnion OD Tolerance
±0.005 mm on functional diameter at final inspection
Hardening Method
Induction hardening on trunnion journals and bearing seat zones
Hardness Verification
Rockwell HRC per ASTM E18 — batch-by-batch
Case Depth
Controlled per application requirement — verified before grinding
Core Hardness
Maintained to preserve torsional fatigue resistance in cross body
Grinding Method
Centreless ground — trunnion OD to final size and Ra specification
Surface Finish (Ra)
Controlled for bearing fitment — specified per application
Cross Width
Per customer drawing or platform specification
Runout / Concentricity
Verified at final inspection using dial indicator
Stress Riser Control
Blended radii at journal-to-body transitions — no sharp undercuts
Traceability
Heat number linkage maintained — raw material to dispatch
Available Locking Configurations
Type
Description & Application
Inner Lock Type
Cross retained within yoke ears using internal circlip groove machined into the trunnion bore. Standard for most truck and trailer applications.
Outer Lock Type
Retained using external snap ring on the bearing cup OD. Common in higher-torque heavy commercial vehicle configurations.
Patti Type / Wing Bearing
Cross retained using a bearing plate / strap and bolt arrangement. Preferred for heavy-duty and off-highway applications where high angularity and torque reversal loads are present.
Variant
Description
Greaseable
Zerk / grease nipple fitted at cross centre. Recommended for applications with defined maintenance schedules. Allows field lubrication to extend bearing life in high-load or dusty environments.
Maintenance-Free (Lubed-for-Life)
Sealed at assembly with controlled grease fill. No field lubrication required. Recommended for sealed shaft assemblies or where maintenance access is restricted.

Bearing cup seals and dust covers fitted on each trunnion journal serve two functions: (1) retaining the grease complement within the needle roller bearing, and (2) excluding road contamination, grit, and moisture from the bearing contact zone. Both are critical to bearing fatigue life.
Seal material and design are selected based on the application operating temperature range and environmental exposure. High-temperature and cold-climate variants are available — specify operating conditions at time of RFQ.

Turning (trunnion profile & cross body) → Milling → Drilling (lubrication ports/snap ring grooves / grease nipple bore) → Induction Hardening → Centreless Grinding → Final Inspection → Batch Release

  • Turning establishes trunnion diameters, cross width, and body geometry
  • Milling and drilling add functional features — grease ports, locking ring grooves, snap ring grooves
  • Induction hardening applied to trunnion zones — case depth and HRC verified
  • Centreless grinding brings trunnion OD to final size and Ra specification
  • Final inspection: trunnion diameter, cross width, runout, concentricity, surface condition, hardness

(Actual full range available in catalogue. Custom trunnion diameters and cross widths manufactured per drawing.)

Trunnion Ø (mm)
Cross Width (mm)
Typical Application
Comparable Series
19.05
48.00
Light commercial vehicle
Spicer 1000 series equivalent
22.00
55.00 – 57.00
Medium commercial vehicle
—
25.00
63.80 – 64.00
Medium–heavy truck
Spicer 1210 series equivalent
27.00
70.00 – 81.80
Heavy truck / trailer
—
30.04
81.80 – 106.30
Heavy truck / off-highway
Spicer 1310–1350 series equivalent
34.94
106.00 – 126.20
Off-highway / agricultural
—
38.04
56.70 – 105.60
Multi-application
Spicer 1410 series equivalent
42.02
119.60 – 133.00
Heavy truck platform (TATA 2518 series)
—
47.62
134.80 – 134.90
Turbo lock type / heavy off-highway
Spicer 1610 equivalent
49.20
154.80 – 154.90
TATA 4018, 4022 series
Spicer 1710 equivalent
52.04
133.00 – 147.50
TATA Hywa / AMW / Volvo FM7
Spicer 1760 equivalent
57.02
144.50 – 152.60
TATA Hywa / AMW 1810 series
Spicer 1810 equivalent
Material
Typical Specification
Alloy steel
42CrMo4, 20MnCr5, SAE 8620, EN 36, or equivalent — grade per application
Carbon steel
Per EN 10277 / EN 10278 or equivalent — for lower-load applications
Material basis
Controlled heat numbers, chemical composition verified at intake, linked to production lot
  • In-process inspection at turning, hardening, and grinding stages — non-conformances caught before the next operation
  • Trunnion OD, cross width, runout, and concentricity verified at final inspection
  • Hardness testing per batch — Rockwell HRC per ASTM E18
  • Surface condition checked — no sharp edges, no grinding burns, no undercuts at journal root transitions
  • Dimensional inspection reports and material traceability records available per lot
  • PPAP documentation available on request — Levels 1–5 per customer requirement

Development accepted based on customer-supplied drawings or sample components:

  • Custom trunnion diameters and cross widths
  • Material and hardness specification per application
  • Lubrication provisions, snap ring grooves, and grease nipple specifications per drawing
  • Seal material and configuration per operating environment
  • PPAP documentation and sample submission for customer validation

Have a UJ Cross requirement — OEM development, aftermarket fit, or qualification?

Share your CAD file, part number, or sample component for dimensional benchmarking. We will respond with manufacturability assessment and lead time.

Contact Us