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The Clubs Virtual Pub For general chat, so come on in and pull up a chair. |
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22-10-2014, 22:32 | #16 | |
Off road maniac
Join Date: Dec 2009
Location: Bexhill on Sea
Vehicle: Y60 Patrol Me, 3 ltr Mrs
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Ex banger racer now off road maniac Lokka on the front with manual hubs Diff lock on rear 3 inch SS straight through exhaust Manly winch bumper with 13000 lb winch 10 spike ground anchor, with multiple straps and blocks Super strong body cills capped with scaffold pole 20% stronger springs all round aggressive off road tyres on wheels so just swap. Aim to get stuck and be completely self sufficient in extraction, love getting muddy, 2ft deep is good but rare. |
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22-10-2014, 22:38 | #17 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2014
Location: Uk
Vehicle: 2004 Terrano 2.7 TDI
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22-10-2014, 23:18 | #18 |
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Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Aflreton,Derbyshire.
Vehicle: 2000se+ 2.7tdi terrano II
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I've got a pair of spare drive shafts somewhere in the shed that I have kept from the one I broke for spares should I ever need them.
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22-10-2014, 23:38 | #19 |
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Location: Dundee, Scotland
Vehicle: 1990 4.2 SWB Safari
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Not quite Alex mate - a cv is a specific type of joint used on a driveshaft which allows the driveshaft to stay at a constant velocity (that's the cv part) no matter how steep an angle the joint is at. The universal joints used in the propshafts on the Trols and the Terranos are MUCH simpler but have a jerkier motion the greater the angle the joint is put under and so are no use at the end of the driveshafts on powered front wheels. I would guess Rick will be meaning that the inner joint is just a standard uj as it won't have to perform at as steep angles as the cv's.
Like the Terranos, the Trols use cv's at the end of the front drive shafts too but ours are protected within the axle swivel joint so we don't have to worry about split gaiters |
23-10-2014, 06:15 | #20 | |
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The old 4.2 diesel is live axle at front right? |
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23-10-2014, 07:16 | #21 |
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Location: Aflreton,Derbyshire.
Vehicle: 2000se+ 2.7tdi terrano II
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A live front axle still needs a uj on it for the steering.
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23-10-2014, 07:45 | #22 | |
Senior Member
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Location: Dundee, Scotland
Vehicle: 1990 4.2 SWB Safari
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Alex, live axle's have nothing to do with it! ALL Y61 (like mine) & Y60 (like Fez and Makeitfit's) Trols are live axled front and rear. CV's are used to allow the driveshaft to go through the angles of steering but still transmit constant velocity and power. If Trols didn't have CV's on the driveshaft (or even a basic UJ), how else would they allow the driveshaft to bend through the steering angles?? |
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23-10-2014, 14:52 | #23 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Location: Aflreton,Derbyshire.
Vehicle: 2000se+ 2.7tdi terrano II
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Think you might have to show him a piccy of how a front live axle works.
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23-10-2014, 18:28 | #24 |
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Location: Northumberland
Vehicle: Terrano 2.7TDI SE LWB
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23-10-2014, 18:33 | #25 | |
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Location: Mid-Wales
Vehicle: Maverick 2.7 - Patrol 4.2
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Some live axles use UJs instead of CVs, Such as jeep axles. |
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23-10-2014, 21:49 | #26 |
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Ok feeling a bit silly but I am lost
Before I started my current work my car experience was incredibly limited as only ever really had dealings with motorcycles In basic what I like, is being able to lift as high as I like, and I believe the old skool trols can do that right? |
23-10-2014, 22:01 | #27 |
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Location: Northumberland
Vehicle: Terrano 2.7TDI SE LWB
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You can get a 4" lift kit for the T2 from Calmini but it's not cheap & have to be imported from Canada or the US hell you can get 38" tyres on a T2 but you'll have to do it the Icelandic way
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23-10-2014, 23:21 | #28 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: Dundee, Scotland
Vehicle: 1990 4.2 SWB Safari
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You can raise any vehicle you want as high as you want, however some vehicles are better set up for lifting than others. Vehicles with live axles front and rear are better for lifting than those with a live axle rear and independent front suspension. (before you go any further google/wikipedia "live axle" and "independent front suspension" so you know what that those mean!) Trols like mine (a Y61) or Fez and Makeitfit's (Y60 or what I think you call old skool) have live axles front and rear. Because they have solid axles it means the whole axle moves with the suspension so when you fit a susp lift you just lift the chassis relative to those axles - the axles and diffs stay at the same level and therefore the CVs or UJs in the front driveshaft stay at the same angle. A Terrano has independent front suspension so the diff is fixed to the chassis and the two front wheels move with the suspension independently. When you put a susp lift on independent suspension it moves the front wheels further from the chassis and further from the diff so the angle on the CVs increases. Running the CVs constantly at a steep angle increases the strain on them so the higher you lift an independent front suspension vehicle the more wear you will cause on the CVs. |
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24-10-2014, 06:35 | #29 | |
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Location: Uk
Vehicle: 2004 Terrano 2.7 TDI
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Thanks for a wicked description , it's made it somewhat clearer, I always knew you could keep going with a trol but didn't know about the mechanics of it ect. Cheers! |
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24-10-2014, 09:16 | #30 |
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Vehicle: Maverick 2.7 - Patrol 4.2
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even over 2-4" susp lift on a trol will cause extra stress on the UJs on the propshaft.
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