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dislocating or retained

Tech Talk for Rover owners.

Moderator: Micka

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dislocating or retained

Post by cooter »

okay another question which do you find gives safer weight distribution and sturdiness dislocating springs or retained the question is regarding my 94 disco
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Post by GURU »

retained will....the spring will stretch when you retain it properly.
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Post by GRIMACE »

Retained
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Post by HSV Rangie »

yup
Mitsubishi 2010 NT DID Pajero wagon, Factory rear diff lock, Dual batteries, ARB bar, winch, Mt ATZ 4 rib tyres.
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Post by 86MUD »

...and what is the best way to retain the spring at the top of the housing??

Cheers

Andrew
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Post by GRIMACE »

86MUD wrote:...and what is the best way to retain the spring at the top of the housing??

Cheers

Andrew
zip ties :lol:

or for a better longer lasting retainer - large hose clamps :D
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Post by RaginRover »

make some little 'L' shaped brackets out of 15mmx5mm steel and mig the long end on to the spring hanger and then short end will hang on to the coils.

When you want to change the cols you can bend the back with a shifter

Tom
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Post by 86MUD »

Gee...what a choice...

But I might go for the pipe clamp option to start with...

Sorry Anthony....I had a bad experience with Zip ties when I was a small child....javascript:emoticon(':lol:')

Cheers

Andrew
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Post by isuzu110 »

Make sure you carry extra extra hose clamps. I have two on each rear spring and had them let go at Levuka recently with a big bang. Had to pop the spring back in and replace the clamps.
Rod

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Post by DiscoDino »

you can go with www.expeditionexchange.com retainers...
LR Disco truggy:
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Post by landy_man »

can vouch for the hose clamps...
I use large, stainless hose clamps on mine and they seem to be olding up alright...
Just use a couple per side...
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Post by Bush65 »

For the rear, you can make a retainer for the top, similar to the bolted flat bar used to retain the bottom of the spring.

The bottom retainer should be beefed up as well by using a larger cross section flat bar.

By retaining the springs, the unsprung weight (wheel, tyre and axle) improves the stability. The body wont lean as much (body lean on cross slopes reduces stability because it shifts the centre of gravity towards the low side). The retained rear springs force the front suspension to work much better.
John
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Post by cooter »

i have made flat bar retainers due to the fact that i had some flat bar just laying around 4 the top but have not decided on what to use at the bottom as my shocks allow the spring to hang in the breeze also how far will they stretch before they will pick a wheel up
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Post by GURU »

cooter wrote:also how far will they stretch before they will pick a wheel up
as far as your shock goes, easily.

RR springs (even aftermarket lifted one) stretch a long way as they are not a very thick wire thickness and have plenty of coils in each spring
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Post by cooter »

aast my disco is now i am in no need for lockers as i always am in contact with the ground so far anyway so i would hate to jeapordise this
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Post by Micka »

cooter wrote:aast my disco is now i am in no need for lockers as i always am in contact with the ground so far anyway so i would hate to jeapordise this
Just having the wheels in contact with the ground does not exclude you from needing lockers. You can still have all four firmly planted and spin a wheel each end - and go nowhere :bad-words:

Off-set rims can also add to the cross-slope stability of your Disco. With rims that have a 2" off-set, you instanly get a 4" wider track :armsup:

Micka
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Post by cooter »

Micka wrote:
cooter wrote:aast my disco is now i am in no need for lockers as i always am in contact with the ground so far anyway so i would hate to jeapordise this
Just having the wheels in contact with the ground does not exclude you from needing lockers. You can still have all four firmly planted and spin a wheel each end - and go nowhere :bad-words:

Off-set rims can also add to the cross-slope stability of your Disco. With rims that have a 2" off-set, you instanly get a 4" wider track :armsup:

Micka
i meant so far as i am just getting back into the sport as i have been into falcons and rally driving for 4 years and decided to try something diferent and safer


lockers are out of my price range at the moment so good travel and great tyres are my only option
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Post by ISUZUROVER »

cooter wrote: lockers are out of my price range at the moment so good travel and great tyres are my only option
Over the years I have seen a lot accomplished without lockers with a combination of good travel, good driving/wheel placement, and suitable tyre design and pressure. A lot of times I have seen an unlocked car walk through where a double locked one had lots of trouble - but it has a LOT to do with the driver.

However, as you tackle harder and harder tracks you will find that eventually a locker becomes necessary, and on some types of terrain, no matter how much travel you have you will notice a big difference without the locker. Such as loose rocky climbs, where locked vehicles can walk up, but unlocked need to use a lot more wheelspeed to overcome the little bits of wheel spin as rocks are disloged.
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Post by Micka »

lockers are out of my price range at the moment so good travel and great tyres are my only option[/quote]

Try Brittish Off Road. They have a large selection of 2nd hand MD lockers,axels,flanges ect for a fraction of the cost of new ones.

Micka
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Post by Tdi200 »

Micka wrote:lockers are out of my price range at the moment so good travel and great tyres are my only option
Try Brittish Off Road. They have a large selection of 2nd hand MD lockers,axels,flanges ect for a fraction of the cost of new ones.

Micka[/quote]

Hey Micka, any more info where this guy is, e-mail address, website, fax, anything............

I am interested in getting an 2nd hand locker for my leafed salisbury, if they have!

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Post by ISUZUROVER »

Tdi200 wrote:
Hey Micka, any more info where this guy is, e-mail address, website, fax, anything............

I am interested in getting an 2nd hand locker for my leafed salisbury, if they have!

Grem
British Offroad

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QLD, 4556
Australia

Ph: (07) 5445 1094
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Post by Micka »

ISUZUROVER wrote:
Tdi200 wrote:
Hey Micka, any more info where this guy is, e-mail address, website, fax, anything............

I am interested in getting an 2nd hand locker for my leafed salisbury, if they have!

Grem
British Offroad

Bruce Hwy
Forest Glen
QLD, 4556
Australia

Ph: (07) 5445 1094
Thank you, IsuzuRover...

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Post by Slunnie »

Retained/unretained?

Hows this! I've got a uted IIa with leaves at the front which has had 1/2 of the leaf pack removed (alternate springs). The rear is coil sprung with the lightest RRC coils I could find (14.7mm and 10 coils I think) - mind you there is next to no weight on them.

Unretained, I barely could lift a rear wheel 20cm before the opposite sides spring well and truely dislocated. As soon as I retained that spring from dislocating with a strap, I could then lift a rear wheel by 650-750mm!

By having the springs retained, this then forced the front end to flex (though not nearly enough), whereas previously it seemed not to budge. Also judging by this, it seems that the shocks may infact take a lot more load when articulating, than just carrying the weight of the axle and tyre.
Cheers
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Post by Bush65 »

Slunnie wrote:...By having the springs retained, this then forced the front end to flex (though not nearly enough), whereas previously it seemed not to budge. Also judging by this, it seems that the shocks may infact take a lot more load when articulating, than just carrying the weight of the axle and tyre.
If longer shocks allow, a retained spring will extended more than it's free length. The spring load goes from compression to tension and the spring tension reduces the load on the shockie and it's mounts when the shockie bottoms out.
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Post by Maggot4x4 »

Micka wrote:lockers are out of my price range at the moment so good travel and great tyres are my only option
Try Brittish Off Road. They have a large selection of 2nd hand MD lockers,axels,flanges ect for a fraction of the cost of new ones.

Micka[/quote]

Doesn't he have MQ patrol diffs? Making that not an option.
[quote="Wooders"]If ya want a 4x4 camry go ahead & buy a Patrol or Cruiser.[/quote]Rangie with 80s LC diffs, Isuzu 4bd1, Twin ARB lockers, 8000lb Hi mount warn, 315x75x16 Procomp XTerrains
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