PRODUCT DETAILS
SpeedFactory Titanium Dowel Pin B-Series AWD Transfer Case
If you're launching a B-series AWD Honda hard, the little OEM locating dowel between the transfer case and the transmission is quietly taking a beating. Under a real drag launch the case tries to rotate, the soft factory dowel bends or crushes, and now your transfer case alignment is off before anything expensive even breaks. This SpeedFactory titanium dowel pin is the cheap insurance that stops that failure chain at the first link.
What It Is and Why It Works
This is a precision CNC machined 10x12mm dowel pin cut from Ti 6Al-4V, the grade 5 titanium alloy used in aerospace fasteners. It replaces the factory locating dowel that positions the transfer case against the transmission on B-series AWD setups. Titanium's strength-to-weight and shear resistance mean it holds the case in position under loads that fold the stock dowel. SpeedFactory includes this exact pin with their billet AWD B-series transfer case, and sells it individually so you can run it with your OEM housing or any other aftermarket case. One pin does the job. You only need a single dowel per transfer case.
If you're building an AWD EG, EK, CRX, or Integra on a CR-V derived B-series AWD drivetrain and putting serious power through it, this belongs in the build. At this price point there's no argument for reusing a factory dowel on a fresh transfer case install.
Specs
| Material | Ti 6Al-4V titanium, CNC machined |
| Size | 10mm x 12mm |
| Quantity | One dowel pin (one required per transfer case) |
| Manufacturer Part Number | SF-02-060-A |
Fitment
| Application | Notes |
| Honda B-series AWD transfer cases | Works with OEM and aftermarket housings, including the SpeedFactory billet transfer case |
This is an application-specific hardware part rather than a year/make/model fitment. It fits the B-series AWD transfer case interface used in AWD-converted Civic, CRX, and Integra builds running CR-V sourced drivetrains, as well as aftermarket billet housings built to the same interface.
What to Know Before You Buy
Check your old dowel when you pull the case. If it comes out bent or ovaled, that's confirmation your case has been rotating under load, and you should inspect the case mating surface and mounting bolt holes for wear before reassembly. The dowel locates the case but the mounting bolts clamp it, so torque them properly. A titanium dowel won't save a case that's being run with loose or stretched hardware.
If you're already deep enough into the transmission to see this dowel, it's worth honestly assessing the rest of the transfer case. The stock cast housing and hypoid gear setup are known weak points on high-power B-series AWD builds, and if you're chasing four-digit power the billet case route makes more sense than reinforcing a stock housing one piece at a time. For a street build or a mid-power setup, this pin plus fresh hardware on a healthy OEM case is the right-sized fix.