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Inigo

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Posts posted by Inigo

  1. On 4/5/2020 at 11:27 PM, Oakmaster said:

    Did I buy these from you?   I think it was one of those - Oh Yes I'll buy those for my 110 Pick-Up!  Hummnnn    - they work great - and thank you for facilitating it!

    In terms of my 65 plate 110 utility 

     I can tell you that I bought a set of Lokari liners - fitted and forgot about them - I never get distacted by the noise of road debris rattleing against the 'space wasters' 

    Yes you did!

    Glad you managed to fit them and they work.  Slightly regret not bothering to fit them myself each time a stone escapes from a tyre, but realistically they'd still be cluttering up my garage.

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  2. Well I was going to take the top off the gearbox anyway to change bushes/any worn parts as my limited experience with tricky to shift gearboxes was replacing worn plastic parts in a triumph herald.  A friend suggested that if I was going to replace some components anyway (and the cup that the standard shifter sits in is £90) then I may as well go for a slickshift.  He has one on his TD5 and loves it.

    I found the throw a little shorter, but I wasn't bothered by the longer throw originally.

    Other minor advantage is that stick no longer bashes against mud dash when I'm less careful.

  3. I've had the vehicle for quite a few years, but not done that many miles.  I had that box refurbed early on in my ownership and it was silky smooth at first.  Notchiness was after it was refitted with a new clutch, so could be related to that, clutch had to be balanced and, I don't recall exactly, but there were some issues getting it to work.

    Looks like I should investigate that area.

    It certainly is an LT85 and the previous time I looked there wasn't a slickshift for it, I just happened to come across it on their website recently and thought it might help, but, as you say it just reduces the throw.

    Having put a few more miles on it over the last day or two, it seems to be settling down a little.  Reverse is now not much worse than it was before.  Once warm, it all works quite smoothly.

  4. Changed the oil again , made no difference.  Fitted a slickshift, bu this might have made things worse - still tricky to engage first and second when cold, but now reverse requires two hands to force it in.  I understand that adjusting the bias springs can make reverse easier to engage, but there is almost no springiness returning gearstick to center, I assumed that tightening bias springs further will make Reverse even harder to engage.

    Having read the overhaul manual, it looks as though I need to remove the top cover and re-adjust the selector forks.  Is this possible with the gearbox still in the vehicle?

  5. Rear door latch has finally seized shut (after months of warning) so I bought a new genuine one to replace it when I dismantle door.  However, it doesn't look the same.  Has lightweight drilled handle and a number of what appear to be counterweights on the other end of the external handle.  Is this a new improved genuine version or a pattern part.  It seems solid enough on the outside, but I'd rather ensure it was genuine if that is what I have paid for.

    Anyone familiar with this style of latch?

     

    Door Latch.jpg

  6. That is actually very helpful, thanks.

    I see you have a bulkhead behind your second row seats that gives some rigidity to the upper brackets.  Mine would have to be beefier if it was standalone.

    Considering getting a partial internal roll cage fabricated to give some support to seats, but I'm also nervous about existing seat belt  mountings - they are currently through the body above rear sliding windows - whatever strengthening plate may have been added, I don't think the bodywork itself would give much support.

  7. I've just bought some decent leather rear seats from a P38 that I was hoping to replace the existing second row seats in my 1987 110.  Currently there is a set of exmoor trim seats that the PO moved back a few inches which gives great leg room for the kids.  Seatbelts have been moved back and a frame fabricated for the existing seats.  I can modify frame to suit the new seats, but the thing I missed is that the existing seats have the seatback locked in position integral to the seat.  The P38 seats are designed so that the top of the seat is locked in position against the bodywork, there is no latch on the hinge between seat base and seat back.

    So, to get these to work, I need to mount a latch from the top of the tub, below the windows.  Has anyone done this (or something similar) before?  I'm a little concerned that this might not be a very strong point in the vehicle and be all that would stop the seats folding forward in an accident.

     

  8. Details about halfway down this page: https://www.megasquirt-v8.co.uk/diff_offroad.php.

    Video here: 

    But neither really show off the brackets in a good light.  I'll try to take some photos of the brackets themselves later.

    Very robust and with adjustment so that they don't push the bonnet off its hinges.  I only received yesterday so yet to see if they'll fit with all of the other gubbins hanging off my wings at the moment.  If they do, I'll take some fitting photos as well.

  9. First thing in the morning, while gearbox is cold, first and second gear are very notchy and difficult to deselect.  Tried double declutching, but it feels as though something is trapped and it is getting worse.  This morning had to really struggle to get back out of first.

    Once I've gone about 5 miles, and the gearbox is nice and warm, everything works as it should.  Still fine if I drive it again later in the day.

    Gearbox was a refurb from Ashcroft and has only done a few thousand miles.  Maybe something was disturbed on fitting gearbox to new engine?

    When engine is not running, it slots into and out of each gear beautifully.

    Perhaps the extra torque from new engine has already damaged the gearbox.

     

    Any ideas?  Or do I need to pull the whole thing out?

  10. As an (eye-wateringly expensive) alternative, I had my cast manifolds ceramic coated by Zircotech.  Didn't really do any before/after comparisons as I fitted them before I had the engine properly mapped.  Avoids lots of the issues listed by Fridge. Although some areas do look suspiciously rusty, I'll have to have a proper look.

    I've also got hold of one of those IR cameras for my phone so may try and take some pictures when its good and hot and see if it makes a difference.

  11. I think SimonR posted that he had used the Audi one, aha thread here:

    I found one on Ebay.  Had it fitted, but it ran on 100% duty cycle, which would kill it quite quickly.  Also means brakes lose power when engine stalls.  I fitted a one way valve and pressure switch between it and the brake booster, but, depending on the adjustment of the pressure switch, it still runs at around 70%.  Somewhere, there is a vacuum leak.

    The one-way valve is no longer one way, so I'll find a more robust version.  There is a one way valve fitted on the outlet from the brake booster which I have a replacement for, hopefully that'll sort it.  I'm hoping the few hours that the pump has been running have not been enough to kill it.

    After buying the pump, I since found out that more recent models of Discovery and RRS also have these fitted.  You may be able to find one more easily that way.

     

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