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Scotts90

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Posts posted by Scotts90

  1. I have the mantec carrier and the gas assist ram on mine, mainly to help my youngest in opening the door if he's in the back. The ram really helps to open even when on hills (265/75r16 km2 on the carrier) but is of no use when closing as it still requires a hefty slam. It's quite surprising how much force the small gas assist ram provides, if the door is let go when opening it picks up a fair bit of speed!

  2. Are the bearings seated properly in their races and the first nut tight? does it spin freely? The first nut should be inside the flange of the hub assembly, should the seal not be on the inboard (towards the disc) side of the hub or is it different for this conversion? Looking at your pics the nut is pressing onto this seal rather than onto the bearing. From the disc side it should be...seal-inner bearing-outer bearing-tab washer-locknut-tab washer-locknut.

    The "outer" assembly is sealed with the drive member and gasket so shouldn't need the oil seal there.

    And copious quantities of grease!

  3. I've had hella 3000s on my works vans for that past 10yrs now. Currently have two chrome luminator 3000s on it and I hate when I get a different van with standard lighting.

    So I'd go for Hellas if you can get them or the copies of they're up to the task. You can get Britax 9" spots for about half the price of the Hellas and they look almost identical in design.

  4. Ok, try and start from scratch here....

    To confirm you have all functioning lights apart from the brake lights? Going from your info that's "yes"

    So, what we have been trying to tell you is how to verify the brake circuit wiring.

    You should have 0volts at the green/purple wire until the brake pedal is pressed? Our previous info was to remove the brake light switch from the equation and check it was operating or not. Is the 12v present with no other circuit live? (ie sidelights off?). Is it 12v as measured from a multimeter or just a test lamp illuminating? If it was a true 12v then your brake lights would be on constantly. If it's a dim light with other circuits on then it could be the cause of a bad earth.

    Older defender wiring is very temperamental and especially regarding earths, try and rig up a decent known earth (eg jump lead to battery -ve and onto the tag for the rear light earth)

  5. A quick test for the brake light switch...just bridge the two wires. Using a 10a blade type fuse is ideal as it gives you a fusible link...it also means you don't have to get an assistant to press the brake pedal if you're doing the "wiggle" method of fault finding...always a favourite on the bullet connectors on the old looms!

  6. 2b7b2c3a4e39cdbf22983198a5c43084_zps1f0a

    I re trimmed my standards with the exmoor kit, new foams, OE seat heaters etc. turned out fine.

    They are easy enough to clean and just wipe down

    8b19a27fee2a9d36209a0a58969bd7fc_zpsb8f7

    Look better in the truck though. LRIsolutions do a centre retrim kit in G4, I've still got to do mine as I was undecided on fitting rear seats and a centre cubby. I have a standard grey vinyl with a black seat cover at the moment as its only usually 3 of us in the truck at a time

  7. Haven't removed one for a long time (about 5yrs ago!)but from what I remember...best to have the tank as empty as possible!

    Remove the towbar arms, remove the filler neck/breather hoses, disconnect the pipes from the filter assembly on the chassis leg. It's a cradle assembly that holds the tank in place, unbolt and then lower, you should have enough wiggle room to disconnect the fuel pipes from the in-tank pump. The fuel lines are held onto the chassis rails with big plastic clips with fir tree type fittings so just pry off (don't nip the plastic fuel lines though)

    The last one I did was after a fuel line chaffed through and it was more than half full of fuel. After removal of the filler neck I stuck a hose in and syphoned as much out as possible.

    It's not the hardest but can be very messy and dirty, it only took a coulple of hours to remove the tank, replace the burst fuel line, refit and prime the system. Done using trolley jacks and axle stands.

    Hope that helps

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