simkell wrote:I have front and rear ARB lockers and the rear is a constant leaker if I had my time again I wouldnt have bought them.
From my experience, the only time the air locker leaks air, is either from improper installation or that the sealing surface has a worn groove from the 'O' rings due to age. Not sure thou if the sealing surface can be sleeved to repair, someone else may be able to help out here.[/quote]
the o-rings themselves will never* wear a groove in the surface of the spigot. incorrect installation of the air housing with contact between the housing and the spigot can wear grooves. it almost always comes down to installation, and the newer "clip-on" air housing is more self aligning, slightly more idiot proof. the only other way I have seen air lockers leak is in front-axle applications which don't get used a lot, and have corrosion on the side that has sat unlubricated for extended periods. common installation faults that result in leaks include incorrect side bearing preload, routing the bundy tube too close to the crownwheel, pinching the o-rings on installation, dry assembly; other causes of failure include debris in oil from previous diff/bearing failures, dirt/water in oil from underwater excursions. there are a lot of ways to stuff up the install or kill them in service, but the hardware itself is near bulletproof.
all that said, BOTH the ARB and the chinese knock-of are QUALITY items. There are two ways to look at quality - from a customer viewpoint, an item is of decent quality if it meets the customer expectation. For the price point of the chinese locker, expectation of failure is proportionally higher. it could be argued from this that the chinese knock off is a higher quality item than the ARB since it survived to almost the failure torque of the axle. from a manufacturer viewpoint, an item is of good quality if it consistently meets its design specification. If the chinese locker manufacturer says its item is good for a certain torque, or a certain power, or a certain number of km before a failure can be expected, and it consistently meets those goals, it's doing what it is designed to do.
which locker should you buy? there are lot of variables to consider. but then you'd buy the ARB anyway, right? it's keeping Aussies in jobs for starters. you can get ALL the parts in a day or two if it ever does fail. it has a decent warranty. The market for chinese lockers is high schoolers and uni students who love to wheel but just can't afford the ticket for an ARB. If you've got a proper job and want a locker, take the bus to work for two weeks to save up the petrol money to buy a proper locker.
*by never, I mean, well, never. I have installed air lockers that are still working perfectly with over 200,000km on the original o-rings. I have removed air lockers with similar km, with barely a witness mark to show where the o-rings were running - the running surface of the o-rings themselves worn maybe .1 - .2mm. 200,000km blows away any manufacturer's warranty. The just don't fail if correctly installed.