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henrycrabbe

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  1. Hi chaps, I'm the membership secretary for Peak 4x4 Response, If any of you are interested in joining, or just want info on what we do then drop me a PM. Thanks David for giving the background info. We do indeed have a meeting planned for this Wednesday evening and normally I'd issue an open invite to anyone who wishes to come, you'd be most welcome. However its the silly season with regard to Christmas dinners at the pub and I'd like to know beforehand if you wish to come along. Don't be put off, but please let me know via PM if you wish to come, you are under no obligation to join btw Cheers, Steve hales PR11 Peak 4x4 Response Membership Secretary
  2. I had this exact problem. Turned out to be a pin hole in one of the spill return pipes that link the injectors together and take any excess fuel back to the pump. The hole in mine was where the acoustic cover had rubbed against it. Looked like a proper "James Bond" style smoke screen on mine Replacement pipes are available, I think mine was under £20 for the whole section.
  3. Funny, I've got Britpart +1 inch springs on mine (220lb/in rears), they went on 3+ years ago and it still sits at the same height as when they were new and is absolutely level. It's done its fair share of work shifting tools, garden stuff and I even had an LT77 & LT230 in the boot once! I must have had the one good set
  4. Hi Francis, just a few Q's... What flavour disco do you have? (age, engine type etc) What wheel/tyre size combination do you run? Cheers, Steve.
  5. Hi Sam, It may help you decide if I give you some backstory to my Disco 300Tdi... When I first had it, it was on fairly rubbish 235/70R16 road tyres on standard Freestyle Alloys. I saw a good offer on 265/75R16 Cooper STT muds and bought a set, but they needed a 2" lift and some trimming of the front bumper end caps and rear arches before I could fit them and even then they would catch on articulation of the rear axle. The other factor is gearing. My car is in fairly good health, but fitting those tyres totally killed the top end speed and acceleration, making the gears spaced too far apart. They did look awsome though Now to the present, I have just dropped the MT's for a set of 245/75R16 BFG AT's and it has totally transformed the car! I have my acceleration back, my top speed has increased (I can keep up with lane 3 motorway traffic again ) and I can manoeuvre again in car parks. Plus they don't (so-far) catch on axle twisters. Steve.
  6. dare I say... there are some on ebay that sell complete kits, which is where my flange came from and I bought a 200Tdi Disco rear prop locally. Beware that when fitting the 4-bolt flange, some diffs need a spacer to take up the extra shaft length. Oh and it helps to heat the centering pin on the old three-bolt flange to break the seal when removing it. cheers, Steve
  7. Well done Jon. I guess its got the SOA conversion on coiler axles to move the springs away from the track rod. That also explains why the arches are fitted, to cover the wider wheel track. I suppose what concerns me most is why the original "owner" didn't explain any of this to the OP when he bought the car!!! I'll probably get flamed for this but... I actually like it If it had the sprigs put back where they belong and a decent gearbox fitted, then it has the makings of a decent motor IMO. BUT I think you'd need a sound understanding of landrover engineering to take it on successfully. Ash, please come back and tell us more... did you go through with the purchase? Cheers, Steve.
  8. Steady on guys... let the poor guy have a chance! Hi Ash & welcome. The one (and best) thing you have done is ask q's of the right people, please forgive us if we sometimes get a bit carried away when commenting on seemingly inferior or unknown workmanship. The truck you've shown us has been modified in a way that is bound to upset the "traditionalists", but that is probably the best reason for owning one - making it your own! Now, I'd say it has a Spring-Over-Axle conversion, which is unusual in the UK (and not liked too well) but is relatively common in the USA. The leaf springs instead of going below the axle are repositioned above, so you gain a lift equivalent to the thickness of the spring pack + the diameter of the axle tube. Ahhh, now I see. Looking at the pictures again there are a few give-aways as to why this might have been done, anyone else spot them... Steve.
  9. Err, Not wanting to cause offence or anything, but why do you need a winch and cage to go greenlaning? Steve.
  10. Hi all, Does anyone have the dimensions required for making a winch bumper to go on the front of a TD5 Disco??? Its primarily the chassis mounts we need to know about, also if anyone has any pics of TD5's fitted with HD or tubular wich bumpers that would be great! Cheers. Steve.
  11. Hi, where are you located? In the UK you cannot do this kind of thing anymore. Otherwise, it is possible and has been done, but why would you ??? Steve
  12. Cheers guys, it definitely has 9/16" studs then. From a quick check on the web, it seems I'm going to have to change to M16 studs if I want to use these wheels, which leads to the question of how best to do it? I suppose I could swap the hubs over? Will this pose any problems with bearings or seals between earlier ('68) stub axles and later metric hubs, or should I just knock out the old studs, drill out the holes and replace with new studs? Thanks again, Steve
  13. Q - can anyone tell me the wheel stud thread type and size used on earlier series vehicles? I've managed to get hold of some nice Wolfrace alloys but they need special sleeve-nuts. I have some metric nuts that fit later series and coil axles, but before I go and swap hubs etc, I'd wondered if you could get imperial nuts to fit the axles I already have? Ta. Steve.
  14. BBC news take on the story Clicky linky I see the Ramblers got the wrong end of the stick too... (Oh and since when has an OS map cost £15???) Steve
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