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o_teunico

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Posts posted by o_teunico

  1. Moderators feel free to move/remove this post if this is not the correct place for it.

    My son Breixo will be 1 year old the next month, and my present for him is going to be a Land Rover bed, as the cradle he is using right now will be too small for him soon.

    I will be using three 190x90 cm matresses for creating a mix of bunk/trundle bed.

    First I searched for a Land Rover with length to width ratio similar to the matress: 86" series I

    Then I calculated the scale to use: 3/5th

    And last, the theme: overland/jungle/safari

    Tomorrow I will go to pick up the 16mm MDF for the project. This weekend I expect to leave the 30x30x1.5 mm box section farame welded.

    Some inspirational pictures.

     

     

    7b32c15fa40d99f49bd9155b6923f4c0.jpg

    83a9a93a5120411676485a4718b19335.jpg

    firstoverland.jpg

    firstoverland2.jpg

    land-rover-discovery-1955-first-overland-expedition-08.jpg

    Web_hero_land_Rover_suite1.jpg

  2. Yep, 100% lock, but will allow something between half to 1/3 of wheel spin before locking. According to pirate, 18 degree of wheelspin is enough and will make it work perfectly on road even in front axle.   

     

  3. A slider bolted to the chassis hanger will avoid it from beeing catched. Once half of the compression travel is achieved, the leaf will touch the slider and start working as in a leaf suspension, making the air supension stiffer and softening the "landing" on the bumpstops.

  4. I will use airbags from p38 and leave the leaf springs in one piece, simply removing shackles. That way, in case of air suspension failure, it will just take a few minutes to go again on leafs.  

    Airbags in front of axle will also give softer ride plus more travel. 

    Transit leafs with orbit eye bushing could handle all that axle twist. 

  5. Divorcing is the way! No adaptors needed, just a custom cheap mini propshaft.

    Imagine that the transfer on the left is the BW 4462 from a P38, and the one in the right an LT230. Fit the PTO and "feed" it with the front axle propshaft from the 4462 and you will have the LT exactly in the middle of front and rear axles. 

    IMG_0137.jpg

    • Like 1
  6. 88 is too short for typicall Us rock crawling doubler setup. 

    Everything absolutely standard, except the LT230 divorce. Standard components, differently located.

    Divorced LT230 could be placed anywere you need, so no lengthwise problems, silly propshaft angles and so on.

    Air suspension with high panhard should minimize body roll. Wider axles maintain heigth to width ratio as standard.

     

    FB_IMG_1477759012723.jpg

  7. 4 hours ago, simonr said:

    If it drives the rear - then you have nothing to worry about!

    Errrr...it was going to be the front prop the one giving the power...

    I will explain why I´m thinking about this idea,

    I want a to fit a BMW/OPEL/Range Rover six pot turbodiesel to my 88". SOA + lift (about 8" total) and long travel shocks are also in the agenda.

    First idea was a simple setup: R380 with LT230, but a P38 R380 will not fit the LT230.

    As Dave explained in another thread/forum, a K/L suffix Disco II box with rangie bellhousing and shaft will work, but that means that I will have to buy two boxes, and I´m working with a very limited budget.

    And here my (vapour) solution, giving lot of advantages: absolutelly standard P38 R380+BW, no rear driveshaft and the front one...driving a divorced LT230, beeing fed by the PTO and clocked for beeing vertical. I already have a 4x2 Santana LT230, so just one box to buy. BW used as a doubler.

    This setup will have driveshafts offset to the left. 110 rear Salisbury fitted upside down will have left side diff and "high pinion". Jeep Grand Cherokee ZJ front Dana 30 is left diff, high pinion, similar track to LR coiler axle and, that from 4.0 autobox, is 3.55 ratio. Not particulary strong, but a guy at the local club has managed to run 37" tyres with no breakages. Also "J" type steering linkage will suit the TRW (ex Nissan Cabstar) steering box.

    This setup should end give front and rear propshafts a horizontal position and equal length. That should made unnecesary the neef of (not cheap) high angle shafts.

    Left diff means right hand engine offset, anothe advantage for LHD cars, giving more room for the drivers foot.

  8. Hi all,

    Let´s imagine that we want to adapt a Range Rover P38 Borg Warner transer case to a single driven axle aplication.

    How could we lock the viscous unit? Will it "fail" (got fixed in this case) by simply leting it do it´s work?

    Disasemble and weld maybe?

    Thanks.

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