North Africa.
Weird vibration
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If it were me, the first thing I would do is get the tyres rebalanced and check the front end freeplay & tie rod ends while the car is on the lift.
Second thing I would suspect is U joints, third would be propshaft splines.
Land Rover used off the shelf Spicer prop shaft ends, so any good propshaft shop will have a replacement part. The end Rover used cames in three spline lengths & Rover used the shortest one. You can upgrade your shafts if you have made any mods for increased articulation just by having a longer spline end installed.
Originally posted by J!m
PS the free-wheel hubs only starve the front upper steering pin and u-joints of oil. Make sure you engage the hubs regularly to move that oil around.
I do not condone the use of free-wheel hubs, as they are a weak link prone to breakage and do not offer any substantial increase in fuel economy on a series truck.
I haven't been on the trail with anyone who had freewheel hub failure. Not to say it doesn't happen, just that I haven't seen it. I had to trouble shoot my Selectros on the trail in Moab once but the problem was me not putting a hub back together properly after replacing an inner oil seal.-
Teriann Wakeman_________
Flagstaff, AZ.
1960 Land Rover Dormobile, owned since 1978
My Land Rover web site
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Re: FW hubs - Seems to me you really need to take a view on what you're using the vehicle for. If you're crossing Africa then I quite understand wanting to stick to the KISS principle. But if the vehicle spends it's life footling about somewhere like Connecticut, like mine does, with an AAA card tucked into the dash then I really don't see any issue at all. Like TeriAnn, I keep them locked most of the time but find there is a very noticable difference on long highway journeys and hills when you have a big old bus like a 109. Well worth having for my own set of circumstances.
Cheers
LukeComment
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