--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).
This ^^^
Jack up each side/wheel (I think you have free wheel hubs - set the hub to "free"). Spin the raised wheel and listen for brake shoe scrub. You will hear and feel it. It won't spin a full rotation easily.
Bearings = overtightened hub nut. The heat you feel will come from the hub/center. If it's the brakes, the heat will radiate closer to the wheel's mounting nuts and away from the hub.
1968 Series IIa
1997 Defender SW (Original Owner - Sold)
Checking the rear nut is easy enough. There is an inspection plate above it. You can view down into the transmission by removing the middle seat cushion and the cover below it. Inspection plate is 4 nuts. If you have and Overdrive, you will need to pull it - otherwise, you'll have a quick/easy/clear view of the nut inquestion.
With regard to the tank's sender, definitely put the old sender back in and test it. You shouldn't have to drain the tank to do it. You may have the wrong sender for your truck. There are different types and they need to be paired to the gauge you are using. Swapping in the old one to see if it works will narrow things down. If the old gauge is also off, there is the possibility your voltage stabilizer (mounted to the back of speedo) is bad. It converts 12 volts to the 10 volts needed by the temp and fuel gauges. An indicator that the stabilizer is bad - the temp gauge also is off on its reading. Other possibilities, the fuel gauge/pod itself is bad. Wiring is bad somewhere in the circuit.
1968 Series IIa
1997 Defender SW (Original Owner - Sold)
100% sure it is not the brakes...already went that route. I did however watched a YouTube on how to adjust the hubs...which I was quite ignorant on until then. That is a very good possibility. The gauge used to measure the float (or free play)...do the auto parts store rent those out?
Consecutive drives without breaking down: 3
I did jack up the front axel and spin both tires in free wheel mode. Right front is free...left front is not. No brake scrub...to confirm the brake was adjusted all the way out (absolutely no contact under 360 degrees.) Heat is generated from hub center...second clear indicator that something is a miss in the bearing (either adjustment wise or function wise).
Consecutive drives without breaking down: 3
Consecutive drives without breaking down: 3
I was wondering if it is relatively safe to remove the old sender without draining the tank? According to the part number and what is available...it is the right one. Granted...does not ensure it will work. But I do not want to point a finger at a new part till I extinguish all other options.
Consecutive drives without breaking down: 3
Just wanted to take a moment and say thanks to all of you guys that respond to my posts. It has helped me a ton on getting passed one problem and on to the next. Between this forum, the green bible, and YouTube...I am getting there. I am learning so much mechanical stuff and the farther I get, the more comfortable I feel since if something does go wrong down the road (and I am sure it will)...I will be better prepared to troubleshoot and solve it.
Cheers!
Consecutive drives without breaking down: 3
I use this one. At that price, nice to own/have.
1968 Series IIa
1997 Defender SW (Original Owner - Sold)