I am plannign on building a spring over axel 88" on 88range rover axels. I will use a 2.25L with a cam, malory electronic ignition, and a weber 2 barrel, late IIA tranny with an early T-case to get the lower low range to compensate for the 3.54 diffs. I will use heavy duty 88 parabolics, and some lone travel shock setup. I am also planning to use revolver shackles front and rear. I am aware this will create the need for hi angle driveshafts. Has anyone done this, or heard about important parts of the project. I am doing it to get approx. 5" of lift. I will be running stock three spoke alloys, the wider track should make the lift move stable.
Spring Over Axle
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Not a problem, I've moved your thread into the proper forum.
Originally posted by CliftonRoverSorry wrong section, Im new here.Comment
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15" X 10" Spoker Rims for Axle Over Project
Dear CliftonRover - Over 20yrs ago I bought a set of 15"X10" white spoker rims for my '69 type 88 Series IIa. I had hopes on running on the beach of Long Island. I got a set of Goodyear Tracker AT tires which I thought would be great on sand and snow, but never got to try them out on the sand. I bought them from Ed Zagata in New Jersey when he went out of business. Ed claimed theses were the last spoker wheels imported to the USA. These 10" wide tires might be usefull in giving you the wider track that you want for your axle over project. I changed to 16" rims, but still have the spokers. If you have any interest please reply. Good luck with your project, mine continues after 33yrs!Comment
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If' he's not interested, I am. Do you know what the back spacing is on them?
Originally posted by Lloyd T MarshallDear CliftonRover - Over 20yrs ago I bought a set of 15"X10" white spoker rims for my '69 type 88 Series IIa. I had hopes on running on the beach of Long Island. I got a set of Goodyear Tracker AT tires which I thought would be great on sand and snow, but never got to try them out on the sand. I bought them from Ed Zagata in New Jersey when he went out of business. Ed claimed theses were the last spoker wheels imported to the USA. These 10" wide tires might be usefull in giving you the wider track that you want for your axle over project. I changed to 16" rims, but still have the spokers. If you have any interest please reply. Good luck with your project, mine continues after 33yrs!Comment
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Originally posted by CliftonRoverI am plannign on building a spring over axel 88" on 88range rover axels. I will use a 2.25L with a cam, malory electronic ignition, and a weber 2 barrel, late IIA tranny with an early T-case to get the lower low range to compensate for the 3.54 diffs. I will use heavy duty 88 parabolics, and some lone travel shock setup. I am also planning to use revolver shackles front and rear. I am aware this will create the need for hi angle driveshafts. Has anyone done this, or heard about important parts of the project. I am doing it to get approx. 5" of lift. I will be running stock three spoke alloys, the wider track should make the lift move stable.
1. What do you plan to do with the vehicle? What specifically do you want to achieve that a stock Series rig can not do? What is the purpose of the 5" lift?
2. Have you actually ran the resulting gear ratio numbers?
3. Are you aware that LR has discontinued the special parts for the early transfer cases? Do you have parts sources in case something breaks??
4. Are you planning to use a 32/36 DGV or a 32/34 DMTL Weber?
5. What are your trying to achieve with "heavy duty" parabolics that would not be achieved from matching springs to your vehicle weight?
6. Do you know what the before and after tyre track will be and how your proposed changes will affect the dynamic roll centre?
Answers to these questions will help us form a more accurate reply to you.-
Teriann Wakeman_________
Flagstaff, AZ.
1960 Land Rover Dormobile, owned since 1978
My Land Rover web site
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Springover
Having owned and built some spring over series trucks. I will tell you you are headed down the wrong path to achieve the benefits of a modified leafsprung suspension.. Do some searching on springovers for other marques. Long supple springs with no arch is the way to go. I would ditch the revolvers as well.
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Hey Leafsprung,
Would you mind sharing some of your experience with us? I have recently decided to change from using my rover as a daily driver to dedicating it to off road use and the on road travel to get to the trails. I am thinking about doing a spring over, but I would really like to hear from someone who has done it to avoid duplicating someone else's mistakes.Comment
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Spring Over
Jay,
Im happy to answer any questions you have via email. lemurstew@aol.com. I will say there is no reason you cannot have a sprung over truck that is very streetable even more streetable than a stock series. Ive put many cross country trips on sprung over rovers and when done right offer an excellent ride that is far more comfortable than a standard leafsprung series rover. Look at all the leafsprung rigs that ride nicely: FJ60, wagoneer, etc. They all have long flat springs. Limit your lift as much as possible; 3 inches of lift is all I would ever want. make sure you are compensating for the lift by widening the track. Stable trucks are capable. Tippy trucks suck.Comment
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Originally posted by sloroccoHow much would you recommend widening the track to compensate for a 3 inch spring over lift? Could that be done just be getting getting rover pattern wheels with less backspacing?
Using that the answer would be 4.5"
Coiler axles, offset or wider wheels, wheel spacers, etc.-
Teriann Wakeman_________
Flagstaff, AZ.
1960 Land Rover Dormobile, owned since 1978
My Land Rover web site
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Originally posted by sloroccoThanks TeriAnn,
So you're saying widen the wheel track by that much right, as opposed to moving each wheel out that far?-
Teriann Wakeman_________
Flagstaff, AZ.
1960 Land Rover Dormobile, owned since 1978
My Land Rover web site
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