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dailysleaze

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Posts posted by dailysleaze

  1. This is fairly common. The replacement arm does not always have the master spline in exactly the same place as the original. You will need to adjust the length of the of the drag link in front of the axle to get it right, and/or take the steering wheel off and put it on a different spline.

    Interesting. Thanks Diff

    True but there are also 4 other sets of splines between the steering lock and the steering box ...... two UJ's with splines both ends

    I hope it hasn't jumped these...

  2. Well it passed today after a weekend of lying in puddles angle grinding upside down for 5 hours and 2 trips to Halfords.

    Everything fine except that the steering wheel is oddly 45 degrees off horizontal to the left when the wheels are straight. I'm 99.99% certain I put the drop arm on the right splines, as it'd have to be 90 degrees out to fit the master splines. I don't know whether this would translate to 45 degrees at the steering wheel.

    All I can think is the steering wheel may have jumped a couple splines when I initially tightened the drop arm nut and realised all that was holding it was the steering lock - then put the drag link on to brace it. Or the panhard rod may have settled in a slightly different place when it was put back on. causing the axle to be in a different alignment in relation to the chassis

  3. The Disco drop arm has hole so that you can fit a normal ball joint from above that screws into the end of the drag link. The only thing is that Discos don't have a steering damper, so there are adapations to be able to bolt a bracket onto the drag link to fit a steering damper for a Defender.

    Personally i'd prefer to leave it standard. If i copper grease the drop arm splines and keep the ball joint boot in good nick then it shouldn't really be a problem again.

    More details here: http://forums.lr4x4....?showtopic=8641 and here http://forums.lr4x4....showtopic=70399

    My new drop arm arrived today and the boot on the ball joint pre-installed looks cheap as chips. I may swap it with the Britpart one that I already fitted that looks better quality! :o

  4. Thanks for your help guys.

    I've come across this thread which explains what Diff was talking about very well - the press fit lip: http://forums.lr4x4.com/index.php?showtopic=28361&st=40

    I know the previous owner replaced the joint about 4 years ago. God knows what happened to the lip. A lovely bodge. So new a arm it is seeing is mine fairly worn.- Cutting I think will be my method rather than trying to whack or pull it :unsure:

  5. Thanks

    That photo was the "before". I've since replaced the ball joint and it's fine - it's just that the boot hasn't stayed down when the joint articulated, so has failed again. I'm particularly curious that there's no lip on my drop arm but there is in the tech archive photo.

    If there should be a lip, then i'll buy a new drop arm (groan). If it's supposed to be like that, then I'll plug away at trying to get the boot to stay down.

  6. I've had an MOT fail on the drop arm ball joint, and now a retest fail because the boot on the new ball joint hasn't stayed on.

    Looking at the drop arm, it doesn't have a lip like the one in the tech archive to hold the ball joint seal on securely. Is mine knackered or just a different type?

    Mine

    post-18025-0-99105100-1335370368_thumb.jpg

    Tech archive

    med_gallery_2_303_893285.jpg

  7. I'm just about to start reconditioning a set of calipers that i have. I want to use stainless pistons and, ideally, a genuine seal kit. Where have you guys bought stainless pistons from? I've found here:

    http://www.shop4auto...-stainless.html

    I bought my pistons from them and they're good. I also got genuine seal kits separately. The story of the seals is here: http://forums.lr4x4.com/index.php?showtopic=71627. I split the calipers also and used their gallery seals and red rubber grease.

    I've heard you shouldn't use petroleum based products/degreasers and should only use brake cleaner(!) or meths on any part of the braking system.

  8. I was reading LRM earlier and in it is the article about the millionth Discovery and support vehicles (and a S1 for some of the distance) going on the big journey over to Beijing. I saw it was mentioned in the article that all vehicles were built to Russian spec (to eventually be sold out there), but more importantly they are all petrols (5.0 litre ones in fact!) because the Diesel Particulate Filters as req. in the UK/EU would basically go kaput when the engine would be run on not-fantastic quality fuels? Does this suggest that in the nearish future it'll become a lot more difficult for people to go travelling by overland unless they start outside the UK/EU, or build a vehicle on an old identity? Or use petrol even???

    I think it was mostly because they were going to donate and leave the support vehicles in Russia afterwards, so they needed to be Russian spec to be domiciled. Lots of people drive across Russia in a diesel and i'm sure a DPF could handle several months. Having said that, i'm not sure i'd do it in a brand new vehicle anyway.

  9. You can rivet from below but you need to create a gap between the skin and the strengthening bar. Not intuitive when the bonnet is upside down pushing them together. I found this out after I had drilled one side through the top. It's not easy to do it underneath but it goes. The spot welding from the factory seems to make sense why it's a pig to do with rivets.

  10. Hi mate is the clutch clearing properly ? had evo1 in my g/box since 2003 no probs just a thought ;)

    Cheers RILEY, I think you've nailed it with clutch drag. I've replaced the clutch fluid and got this out:

    post-18025-0-51409900-1331466374_thumb.jpg

    The bite point is a lot higher how and hardly any crunching problems. Still a slight bit of resistance when cold (more of a "thhup" than a crunch), but when warm it's pretty much non existent. The gear lever meets no resistance whereas before I would have to put in effort to go into second.

    The black stuff could either be clutch dust sucked in via the slave cylinder or degrading seals, so i'll keep an eye on it.

    Nice to know that EVO1 might actually be a decent oil. I just hope that the gearbox synchros aren't too affected by 1800 miles with a dragging clutch. :blush:

  11. Thanks for a great day Jason + the family's constant food and drink supply. Everyone worked really well and it's quite frankly more fun teamworking than doing it solo. Pity it didn't all get finished but i'm glad to see i'm not alone in having to deal with the same rusty/stuck/fubar jobs that sometimes get the better of you!

    Plus with a birthday coming up i've now got a list of all the tools I realise should be in my toolbox (difflock propshaft tool, rachet spanner, massive torque wrench)

    Unfortunately i'm on holiday next week but would have loved to help get the last bits sorted to see it moving again.

    Will

  12. Hiya

    It's certainly a thought. I replaced the clutch with the gearbox and it feels a little low on the pedal. I need to replace the clutch fluid at some point - it looks a little dark which might have an effect.

    Any ideas how to tell if it's disengaging properly? There's no grinding noise on fully pressing the pedal or desire to move forwards, etc. The only thing I do notice (and this happened on the old gearbox as well as this new one), is that when pulling off a motorway junction after a long run, coming to a complete stop at the lights and putting it into first gear with the clutch pedal fully depressed, there's a clunk and little lurch, like something in the drivetrain has moved a bit. It only happens in this circumstance and no other time.

    I think i'll check the pedal alignment first.

  13. it looks like you're getting a reaction , did you use acid etch primer or normal primer, if it's alloy you're spraying you need etch if there's any bare metal

    Most of the rippling is around where the filler is, but there are slight bits elsewhere. There was no bare metal and the primer is Halfords filler primer.

    You'll never get good results spraying in this weather , wait a couple of months until it warms up a bit

    I think that can be said of most LR jobs!

  14. I'll have get round to doing a fluid change some time and report back.

    The more I think about it, the more notchy it feels. Even going into third or fourth there is a little "grate" to get it in, as if the gears aren't quite at speed yet.

    I did read that the fluid can't be too viscous, as the baulk rings need at least some grip to make the gear clusters speed up

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