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I know it`ll be a seal but is it one that would have been damaged during installation?
The lock is only new and has only been used 2 or 3 times and it has been doing this since about 4 weeks after install and only 1 use.
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I know its a seal that has gone.G_loomis wrote:One of the seals in the locker itself has gone Kaput. Mine did the same, though it took 5 years, not 4 weeks.
There shouldnt be any air coming out your diff breathers at all...as the air from the locker should NOT be in that part of the housing.
I am afraid the centre has to come out and new seals fitted to the locker. Since its only new, I would imagine the waranty would cover it though.
All the time from what I can tell. The lock hasn`t been turned on for months and it has oil every where.DAWSO 4x4 wrote:Does it only do it when the locker has been ingaged or does it all the time
If its doing it all the time then you prob have a blocked breather. And also could have water in the oil. So its getting hot and pushing oil up the line.Guts wrote:All the time from what I can tell. The lock hasn`t been turned on for months and it has oil every where.DAWSO 4x4 wrote:Does it only do it when the locker has been ingaged or does it all the time
If the lock gets turned on it pushes the oil back down the line, turn it off and all is good in the short term. Then over time it works its way back up again.
But if its a seal that has gone in the lock and has nothing to do with the install then they (ARB) should warranty the seal and the removing/refitting of the centre.GQ Bear wrote:Who installed it? If ARB did you're laughing. Take it to 'em and demand they fix it under 2yr parts and labour warranty. If someone else fitted it then ARB will warrantee the seal (about $5) but then it's upto the installer to come good with his side of the bargain.
I had a suspected seal and had a huge s**t fight with ARB and installer(not ARB) to have it fixed. Turns out i was just a couple of months on the good side of my warranty and after threats and other irate phone calls to Kilsyth head office and visits to installer, they agreed to fix it under warrranty. If it turned out to be a fitment error they would bill the installer.Guts wrote:But if its a seal that has gone in the lock and has nothing to do with the install then they (ARB) should warranty the seal and the removing/refitting of the centre.GQ Bear wrote:Who installed it? If ARB did you're laughing. Take it to 'em and demand they fix it under 2yr parts and labour warranty. If someone else fitted it then ARB will warrantee the seal (about $5) but then it's upto the installer to come good with his side of the bargain.
This is why I`m wanting to know what it is before I go and see ARB. If its a fitting problem then they will not even here from me, other then getting a new seal.
Talk to your installer.Guts wrote:But if its a seal that has gone in the lock and has nothing to do with the install then they (ARB) should warranty the seal and the removing/refitting of the centre.
This is why I`m wanting to know what it is before I go and see ARB. If its a fitting problem then they will not even here from me, other then getting a new seal.
If it is passing oil through a purge valve at all then you have a definite issue somewhere. Purge valves were invented to answer for the "Toyota problem" because their breathers are so prone to failure which builds up pressure inside the diff. These valves actually have a built in regulator which hold back 3 to 4 PSI of pressure inside the diff to counteract the breather blockages. Make sure your breather is clear and you don't have water in the diff. If it were me that would include scrapping the Toyo 1-way spring loaded breather cap and extending the breathers up to the dry air point and simply 'J' terminating them. If you still get oil seepage then it would most likely be a seal housing set-up problem. You can either route the purge valve exhaust line to somewhere it doesn't bother you (this is a one way line and doesn't need to be dry or clean) or can get the set-up looked at. Mark at Moorebank is one of the best diff installers I know of. He should be able to help.V6XtraHilux wrote:...they put in a "purge valve" in the airlocker line. This stopped oil coming out at the solenoid, but meant it dripped oil at the purge valve, which drips all over my rear axle!
This makes it sound even more like breather pressure. The 'brass' bulkhead fitting screwed into the diff housing is an NPT thread the same as a gas fitting. It takes pressure to get oil past this thread.Had the seal replaced, but turned out the oil was coming out around the brass fitting screwed into the diff housing.
A purge valve should not have been used to try to cover up a problem.Also had a locker fitted to the front IFS diff, and it also dripped oil from day dot. My installed (not ARB) got charged by ARB agent (not ARB franchisee) to supply a purge valve, and then he charged me. It then became a shit fight. Oil now leaks from the purge valve lines.
The purge valves were designed to try to remedy what we refer to as the 'Toyota problem'. That's not a shot at Toyota's. I love them personally. But the guy who designed their axle breathers must have been the owner's nephew or something. The valve caps are just the beginning of the problems. The location is also wrong on 90% of their axles. On 80 78, & 100 series live front axles you'll find the breather tubes plumbed into the far end of the axle tubes. These are high pinion assemblies so the oil level is elevated as well. So when you drive off-camber for a while with the axle tube completely filled with oil there is no way to push air out at all...so it just pushes a column of oil up the breather line. Then even when you straighten up you can't vent the pressure because you have a breather line full of oil being held in place by pressure. So you just drive around with a pressurized axle the rest of the day until your axle can cool off.V6XtraHilux wrote:...ARB are aware of the problem, they produced the purge valves to cover the problems...
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