Page 1 of 1

Leaking diff oil ! ! ! Need help !

Posted: Mon May 09, 2005 10:30 pm
by SWAMPRR
hi i was just wondering if anyone has had this problem b4 ? i was leaking diff oil out behind where the spindle bolts onto the cv housing (For ages !) ...and i pulled it all apart and found it was a bad seal - almost nothing left !

so i got a replacement seal but noticed that the diff oil had leaked into my cv where i thought was usually packed full of grease but mine had very little and allot of diff oil...

my question is is there a seal inside around the axle that stops your diff oil flooding into your cv joints? or is there somthing wrong here...i noticed some brass washer type things that look like they do the job sorta?

NEED HELP ! ! !

Posted: Mon May 09, 2005 10:55 pm
by landy_man
you are supposed to have diff oil in there

oil seal

Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 7:35 pm
by THE 109
i think from 86onwards there was a seal in the wheel bearing nut to keep oil out of the wheel bearings,which were packed with grease.the earlier ones had no seals and ran diff oil through to the bearings.

Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 10:21 pm
by SWAMPRR
oh ok thanks, i looked in the manual at the Land rover spares place and there was few extra seals i didnt recognise...mines a 82
explains it then thanks.

Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 11:35 pm
by Ralf the RR
Yep
There are 2 seals.
A hub seal and an axle seal.

I'm not sure of the purpose of the axle seal.
It either stops diff oil getting into the swivels or swivel oil getting into the diff.

I recently replaced mine because the swivels were draining into the diff, and overfilling it.
(did the bearings, swivel [ball] seal, hub & axle seals while it was apart)

Posted: Tue May 10, 2005 11:44 pm
by red90
Most people remove the seal between the diff and the CVs. It allows the CVs housing to vent and reduces the chances of running the CVs dry. The normal level of oil in the CVs is higher than the axles. It does not seem to matter. The normal method is to overfill the diff slightly.

Posted: Wed May 11, 2005 7:08 pm
by Ralf the RR
red90 wrote:Most people remove the seal between the diff and the CVs. It allows the CVs housing to vent and reduces the chances of running the CVs dry. The normal level of oil in the CVs is higher than the axles. It does not seem to matter. The normal method is to overfill the diff slightly.


What happens when you are on a 30 degree (arbitary figure) sideways slope.
Wouldn't all the oil drain to the lower hub and the upper hub be dry?

Posted: Wed May 11, 2005 7:09 pm
by SWAMPRR
oh ok....i thought your cvs were full of grease not oil iv only done this job once b4 on a hilux ages ago and dont remember.

Posted: Wed May 11, 2005 7:35 pm
by ISUZUROVER
SWAMPRR wrote:oh ok....i thought your cvs were full of grease not oil iv only done this job once b4 on a hilux ages ago and dont remember.


Hilux (and many other) CV's are filled with grease. Rover are filled with oil (usually).

Posted: Wed May 11, 2005 7:38 pm
by ISUZUROVER
Ralf the RR wrote:
red90 wrote:Most people remove the seal between the diff and the CVs. It allows the CVs housing to vent and reduces the chances of running the CVs dry. The normal level of oil in the CVs is higher than the axles. It does not seem to matter. The normal method is to overfill the diff slightly.


What happens when you are on a 30 degree (arbitary figure) sideways slope.
Wouldn't all the oil drain to the lower hub and the upper hub be dry?


NO - To drain to the other side, the oil in the hub on the high side has to flow upwards to the drive flange, before it can then flow down through the stub axle into the swivel housing, then into the axle tube.

Any slight movement of oil would only be temporary, and enough would stay there to provide lubrication.