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sgnas

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Everything posted by sgnas

  1. Admittedly a much older design of engine, but I filled mine with petrol by mistake. It ran with no problem for a few miles and it was only when I worked out that the reason the diesel had not foamed much on filling that I realised what I had done. Dropped most of the tank into drums, drove to a different fuel station and refilled.
  2. This unimog looks a bargain. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/275469777165?hash=item402347390d:g:jnIAAOSwp1NjKvUA&amdata=enc%3AAQAHAAAAoLo7fDhUWDJppnFoqs6iTYkd3lVC%2FF8Z%2FK8JVm%2BLB%2FBnyk6UrKwTy%2BWYhMT4hsiHMFbB0x06c0DXsfXVSeCC9fsEnQMjubQj71dT77MB17mk5t8%2BHpC1yf2s9qUOzXgvaEvhndrY5hbnpc9EDhaCliYKFUvK1XaIOsSf9hp8y1p96Tj6q23PTE9g0Cq9727RJYr1rcDDVodP8ViE31NUxSw%3D|tkp%3ABk9SR9jowavvYA
  3. I did mine a week ago. Black in minutes. shockingly 6-7 litres of oil and a filter came to nearly £50 for a diy oil change!
  4. Glad someone understands how personal taxation works. 8-10 years ago I added up all the PAYE, NIC, DUTY, VAT etc of a work colleague vs their expected return (education, healthcare, services, infrastructure) to prove that if you have 2 kids in education you are not a net tax payer until you earn substantially more than the average wage. If you are unfortunate enough actually need to make use of the health service for a serious health issue it is entirely possible that you will never be a net tax payer…..
  5. I have the same issue, everything in the hedge produces sharp pointy bits. You can get solid tyre/wheel assemblies. They are spendy. Kenda and maxxis do puncture resistant tyres with Kevlar. The standard ones have very little in the construction compared to a car tyre. Some take the same size tyre as a haybob, but would be impossible to fit by hand. If you happen to have the right size tyre/wheel they are the same as go cart wheels. You can get 2 part wheels. These don’t stop punctures but make patching the tube much easier. You can get a thick rubber band to line the tyre. The thorn then has to be long to get to the inner tube. I had access to quality rubber and made my own bands. Not 100% puncture proof but has dramatically reduced incidence.
  6. Superglue sticks rubber really well. Cut one and glue it back together.
  7. The Turner ones solved all my problems. I had a massive amount of vibration after changing the 25+ year old mounts during a chassis change. Couldn’t believe it was just due to new mounts. Had the timing belt changed and timing reset after the starter motor got shaken to pieces. That improved things a bit. Changing the mounts to Turners was night and day difference. glencoynes may be good but they are rarely in stock!
  8. My 2wd Panda was unbelievably good in the snow. The 4wd versions have always been the car equivalent of a mountain goat.
  9. The machine screw type stows widthways in a bag under the 2nd row seats. 2 Velcro straps lessen the movement. I think they are sewn to the carpet.
  10. I’ d bet 50p on it being the switch. Not hard to get at and remove. If you can read a wiring diagram to find the right colours you could use a small length of wire to jump the terminals and see if the lights come on.
  11. When we first got the 110 and my wife was using it as the family wagon I made sure she not only knew how to change the wheel but could physically do it. Currently she has an Alhambra with self sealing continental runflats. Only one manufacturer in that size, the car comes with no provision for a spare, no jack, no wheelbrace, no pump, no gunk. We have never worn a tyre out! 1 punctured in the tread and not self sealed. 1 barely detectable leak in the sidewall, but flat in 4hrs. 2 rapidly perished in the sidewall. I will be looking for a car that has space for a spare next time round.
  12. Ex work colleague had a Peugeot. He had it from new. Went to change the front pads and found different manufacturers callipers on either side, which also requIred different pads either side!
  13. Just found out that my faded original paint is now a desirable satin finish........
  14. Ok, so there is opportunity for misalignment on reassembly, but it is usually obvious where you went wrong 🙄
  15. I don’t understand why people put so much time and effort ( on a 90, 110 is a bit more involved ) into not breaking the body down to man portable size pieces at the start of the re-chassis process. The improved access to axles, engine etc must save time in the long run. Then there is the inevitable remedial work on seatbox, battery box etc which is easier when it is in pieces.
  16. The legs of the 2.5td air filter can mounts on 3 tabs. Your arrow points to the fore one. another by the spring mount and the last on the outside of the chassis rail.
  17. You could make something similar using the original defender screw jack
  18. Big block tyres are not great in deep fresh snow either. They just dig big holes.
  19. Try Paul at pex5x5. He fits some heavy duty ones. Not sure if he sells them for self fitting though.http://www.pex5x5.com/
  20. T piece can be had for less than a fiver. There comes a point where belligerence does not make financial sense.
  21. When you see what 2nd hand Ifors go for you'll be surprised to find out what they cost new. I have a friend who's dad uses the trailers pretty much each week for building materials. Admittedly he really looks after them but he trades them in every 2 years ish and makes minimal loss.
  22. I bought a Fiskars 2 years ago. Got to be about 1/3 of the effort to split than the maul it replaced.
  23. The inside inner race is stuck tight. Slit it in 3 places with a dremel, still stuck. Run a weld bead around it to heat it, still stuck. Left it in the freezer overnight, still stuck. For the sake of £50 of parts I'd prefer it mobile while I faff around at my leisure to get the race off.
  24. I need to rebuild a front stub axle on a 1998 110 (although the parts will be the same on most similar aged axles) Apart from wheel bearings, locknuts washers etc. which I carry spares of already, what do I need. List so far. Stub axle ftc3154 Seal ftc5268 Thrust bearing ftc56 Needle bearing ftc861 Gasket ftc3648
  25. Nothing stops a chainsaw quicker than bailer twine! It also melts into the gears so takes ages to fix. I'm sure it will work on other cutting equipment too.
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