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A potential bargain for someone............
orangebean replied to Disco-Ron's topic in Defender Forum (1983 - 2016)
Not exactly new- a bit of eBog digging shows that he bought it in mid May for £165. It was then described as: "hi thanks for looking this is a 300 tdi turbo which i bought brand new, I was lead to believe that my original one was at fault so bought this and fitted it for all of an hour but found that it was a pipe that was faulty it has sat in my garage for about 7 months the outer body has slight surface rust but the inside is very clean and as it should be, it was bought for a discovery but believe it will fit any 300 tdi all pipes and brackets are on it" -
Will second the view on Bronco's. Mine are delaminating happily and the truck's been parked up for 6 months . They were fine when I parked it...
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Fair bit of positive eBog feedback on these. Of course it doesn't say how long they last...
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Thanks for the input everyone. I'll put the small plate into the RH cover to (partially) cover the breather and not bother with the LH one. Seems like the best compromise!
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I might be- but not sure. The plates would stop that... but
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Race you to it on eBog then- good thing it's not an auction
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V8 Rocker Covers- mystery tin plates! Finally on the last legs of the 3.5 Vitesse efi rebuild. Supplied with the "rebuilt" engine which I've rebuilt again were a pretty pair of powder coated rocker covers. The manky covers on the old 3.5 efi engine had a tin plate fixed inside each- one half plate, held in with 4 screws and in the other, a full-length plate held in with 8. The new covers have none, but have pre-drilled holes where the plates could mount with a bit of tweaking. What purpose, if any, do the plates serve? They seem kind of irrelevant, but, no doubt, have some arcane purpose to do with moon phase vapour adjustment or something. I'm tempted to leave them out but will bow to the considerably greater experience out there for advice. Thanks in advance Edit- actually quite a long winded question, but hopefully won't require a long answer
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Spookily enough I was looking at the same £15 Smith and Allan stuff on eBog today. With a 230 and a couple of axles to fill it seemed a reasonable price, conducive to very frequent changes which should outweigh/ cost the "quality" alternatives. So, if yours doesnt destroy itself after 50 miles, that's the route I'll take
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How much is too much? Play in diff input flange
orangebean replied to orangebean's topic in International Forum
Prob need some kind of solvent. I've used this with good results. The traditional gasket softeners/ cleaners like this are great for getting rid of the dreaded red hermetite but don't do much with silicon based stuff. HTH -
I find the AA pretty good myself. As posted above, they're a little pricey, but cover the whole family fleet of truck, campervan, 2 cars and motorbike all of which have enjoyed the fuel saving long distance Relay service at one time or another. My pic says it all really
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How much is too much? Play in diff input flange
orangebean replied to orangebean's topic in International Forum
That's what I feared. Another thing to throw money at. If you hadn't already taken the nick Nige then this really would be the Hybrid from Hell. 6 months into owning it and the furthest it's travelled is on the back of an AA recovery truck... Oh well, off to identify the diff and heading for the Wanted section, but still chanting the mantra "It's got a totally solid chassis, all of the body panels are new and it's got bills to prove that everything else has been refurbed" I'm about 20 seconds from slinging this on eBog as another one of those unfinished projects... -
On the allegedly rebuilt rear RR diff on my hybrid there is 1-2 mm of lateral play on the input shaft. Whilst engineering sense says there should be none, maybe LR built in some kind of tolerance?! Assuming it's not meant to be like that, what are my chances of just tightening up the centre nut to reduce the play? I've a horrible feeling there's a rebuild/ replacement diff on the horizon and am hoping that's not the case cos I'd quite like to actually drive the thing one day and the engine/ gearbox rebuild has already taken forever. It's that low point in any project where you wonder why you started in the first place...
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Is towing caravans really that difficult?
orangebean replied to plasticbadger's topic in International Forum
So, does this look like an appropriate combination? Spotted just now opposite my house and yes, it really is loaded up with camping gear.