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Stormin

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Posts posted by Stormin

  1. I think some clarification is required on the difference between the Jate Ring and the lashing / tie down eye, which both affix to the same points on the chassis.

     

    Jate ring [ATTACH=CONFIG]35764[/ATTACH]

     

    Lashing eye [ATTACH=CONFIG]35765[/ATTACH]

     

    The Jate rings should be used in a pair and fixed to the chassis using M12 Grade 8.8(min) bolts.

  2. The problem that I will have is that to cut a square hole, the broach must have teeth on all four sides and can be passed through the hole only once. This will test my toolmaking skills to the limit and I hope not to disappoint Marcel!

     

    Steve

     

    Can a broach similar to that shown not be used several times to cut out each side of the square in turn? I can't see how a four sided broach can work on the first pass where it would be cutting on all four sides.

     

    As far as a blued fit onto the column. I don't think the current condition of the taper on the shaft would reliably transfer a good and consistent amount of marking to the hub on subsequent re-fits. Unless of course you refinish the shaft first by building up with metal or filler and re-shaping to a smooth finish. Given that the aluminium hub of the wheel is soft the good whack with a hammer should do much to sort out any slight discrepancies in fit. Occasional re-tightening of the centre nut may be required as the hub relaxes to a better fit.

  3. How do we cut a 5/8" square tapered hole through the centre? Any advice would be welcome!

     

    How about casting the hole into the wheel and just trim up with a square file? Should be quite easy to make a plug mold for the square taper.

    The wheel pattern looks almost good enough to be just painted and used as is. Who would know? apart from a few people following this thread on here.

  4. Mike,

     

    Putting the return edge on the plate as per parts diagram picture would necessitate enlarging the plate 3/8-1/2inch or so. That would then interfere with the removal of the front grill from it's clip. Probably why non of the ones I've seen match the parts book.

  5. What I wouldn't give for a genuine front winch roller mount. Mine has a ballsed up steel fabrication, Genuine ones listed on ebay but look at the price!!

    http://shop.ebay.co.uk/?_from=R40&_trksid=m570&_nkw=Land+Rover+F/C+101''+Winch+fair+lead+housing+NOS+598669

     

    You're probably better of with the steel fabrication or if it's really untidy making your own version. The genuine ones are cast and renowned for cracking especially if dealing with a side load. Certainly not worth buying a genuine one at that price.

  6. why a jeep? every man and his dog have a jeep, get something different that stands out from the crowd.:cool2:

     

    Because a Jeep fits in your average garage, still allowing space for the washing machine, kids bikes etc.

    Because a Jeep is easy to drive on a normal driving licence.

    Because a Jeep is easy to fix with plenty of spares available from many dealers.

    These are the facts that must have driven prices up as it certainly isn't down to rarity.

  7. That looks ridiculous on those tyres Mike. Bet it's got more grip and off road ability than standard bar grips though.

     

    What I'd give for that left hand rear bumperette! I've retrofitted a Nokken on my vehicles but haven't been able to aquire the rear bumperette which includes winch fairlead mounting. If you remove it to do cross member repairs I'd be interested in borrowing it as a template to copy and modify one of mine standard ones.

     

    Are you sticking with the home made truck cab or going back to canvas roof? All the hoops were available from the 101 club shop, last I looked, for ridiculously cheap prices.

  8. Yeah, I've read about the Hotchkiss jeeps.

     

    I may be leaning on a company acquiring the Jeep and then restoring it for me. Has anybody gone down this route before?

     

    Sounds like a good way of making a not very cheap vehicle even more expensive. I would suggest buying a privately restored one were someone hasn't costed their time, effort and profit into the project.

  9. Looks like it's a prototype with different side doors from production versions and a Whale tail spoiler for some reason.

    Looks to sit very low in the water. They have a good few goes at trying to swamp it with the passing gun boat bow wave, so assume it's an evaluation exercise.

  10. Having had Hilux 4x4 pickups as my main transport for 7 years I'm so glad they were both fitted with freewheel hubs! The difference in performance was very noticeable.

     

    Were those automatic free wheel hubs as most of the Japanese motors seemed to have at the time? Took the hassle out of engaging and disengaging manually.

     

    I think from the economy figures Mike gives it's hardly worth bothering with freewheel hubs. I never noticed any performance or economy difference myself, but perhaps that's due to the more than ample power of a 2 1/4 petrol land rover. :D

  11. Another reason to periodically engage front hubs on Land Rovers is to lubricate the top swivel bearing. Don't know if it's the same arrangement on the Jeep but suspect as Land Rover copied it probably is. The top swivel bearing is actually a railco bush similar material to bakelite but absorbs oil, it eventually dries out. The bush relies on splash feed lubrication from the moving UJ in the oil filled swivel housing joint. Run with the hubs out and this joint doesn't rotate or feed oil to the top bearing.

    I had front free wheel hubs on my Land Rover and never ran with them disengaged. I should've refitted standard drive flanges really.

  12. Not considering the diff ratio, are there different types of diff, is the pinion in a slightly different position, are the gears cut at different angles are there bearing differences are there other options other than crown wheel and pinion ?

     

     

    There are other options than crown wheel and pinion. Don't forget the very heavy duty vehicles of WWII the Pacifics used a chain drive to the rear axles. Also in use on Sentinel steam wagons until the 1950's. A chain is a very efficient method of transmitting power with little losses.

     

    An entire transmission system is a chain of torque multipliers from the engine to the wheels. With few exceptions, every link, gearbox, transfer box, differential, hub reductions increase the torque to the driven wheel. Each link induces some loss is power through friction. The size and reduction ratio of each link governs how strong the next link down the chain must be.

  13. In the event of a incident involving fatality or serious injury , there will be criminal court , inquest and probably civil court (to apportion blame).

     

    At any court there will be "expert witnesses" or a "joint expert witness".

     

    To cut a long story short - the info. that he will give to the bench is that the parties completing the weld repair should be able to present as part of their documentary evidence 1) approved weld procedures (normally to such as BS / EN ISO etc. etc. etc. , that is approval by a reputable body (best leave that) 2) if manual welded - Welder approvals , (coded and working within extent of their approvals + time limit).

     

    Anything less and you will be hammered in court and your insurance probably void.

     

    You'll be putting me off doing any repairs to my vehicles with statements like that!

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