No, only 0 (or 180) degrees does the job. I'm describing the orientation of the inner yoke positions of the driveshaft. Just look under a truck to see what I'm referring to. Your standard PTO shaft ought to be aligned the same, too. Ever wonder why you can only put the two pieces together one way (both 'square' and triangular tube types) ? It's to preserve the shaft torque balance. The multi-spline joint in the OP's picture looks like it could go together in any one of 15 (or so) different ways. Usually these shafts are pinned to prevent them from being disassembled, thus potentially loosing their orientation. But who knows what could change that. I hope some owners look under their machines and tell us what they see. If the statistics of yoke angles are all over the place, then JD needs to recall the tractors.
In all of this, I'm presuming a double Cardan type jointed shaft. If not, then some other torque variation problem is a cause (like a failed motor mount). I just don't buy the grease theory. Nobody ever greases a truck driveshaft. There just isn't any movement unless a trans mount breaks (raises up the tailshaft) or a spring breaks (raises up the pinion nose). The failure mode is the same: unequal angles cause an unstable shaft torque vector.
In all of this, I'm presuming a double Cardan type jointed shaft. If not, then some other torque variation problem is a cause (like a failed motor mount). I just don't buy the grease theory. Nobody ever greases a truck driveshaft. There just isn't any movement unless a trans mount breaks (raises up the tailshaft) or a spring breaks (raises up the pinion nose). The failure mode is the same: unequal angles cause an unstable shaft torque vector.