2" lift kit now fitted

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disco_mikey

Active Member
Posts
728
Location
Dundee, Scotland
Before:

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During:
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After:
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More ground clearance (to the diffs) than the 300 Disco sat next to it in the last picture, and a fair lift compared to a standard F/L

Now, off to find some mud! :D
 
Looking good:) what tyres did you go for in the end?

215 R15 Technic Trackers:
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The price was right (paid £10 for them, and £20 for the wheels!) as was the M/T pattern. Bloody noisy though, and wont get much bigger tyres without spacers/modulars, due to the distance between the tyres and struts...

I ended up buying 4x camber bolts, one for each corner and having a proper 4 wheel alignment done. All the rear link bushes were well worn, so these were replaced, and the arms freed off at the same time for the alignment to be done :)
 
Bargain. Makes up for the cost of the lift:) my kumhos are bloody noisy too. But proper tyres look the nuts on them.
 
did you fit the type of ebay? do they just sit between the shock and the body?

ta

Yup, thought about bigger/stronger springs, but a lift kit was much cheaper. Paid £50 from Ebay for it, and another £40 for camber bolts.

There is a recurring theme here. See if you can spot it! ;)

Bargain. Makes up for the cost of the lift:) my kumhos are bloody noisy too. But proper tyres look the nuts on them.

It does look a bit gay with standard size wheels and tyres :eek:
 
Yup, thought about bigger/stronger springs, but a lift kit was much cheaper. Paid £50 from Ebay for it, and another £40 for camber bolts.

There is a recurring theme here. See if you can spot it! ;)



Erm you're very frugal with your money?:)
Worked out a dammed sight cheaper than mine
 
The car stands me at £550, including buying it (as a non-runner), getting it running, MOT, lift kit + bolts, wheels and tyres, bushes etc...

Try buying a tratter for that kind of money ;)
 
Looks good, It will go bang the first time it sees some serious off roading though.

Already done some serious off-roading in a Freelander. Only issue was lack of ground clearance, which has now been resolved ;)
And if it does need a head gasket, the car will still not have cost me much at all.
As said, try buying a Defender for £500 ;)

Cut the wings.

Done that. Cut them down to level with the top of the chassis rails. Only way to cure it fully would be to cut a chunk out of the chassis rail, and have it welded up...

How does it drive, DM ? Looks like a good job, and for the cost of it all, fair play too ;)

Drives all right, apart from the tyre noise. Never noticed how noisy M/T tyres are, but a Freebie is a bit more 'refined' than a tractor, so you notice it more

Front end feels a bit light. Not sure if the tracking is still out, or whether its down to the tyres. Will need to stick the alloys + A/T tyres back on, and see what happens, and have the tracking checked, at least...
 
The light front end will prob be down to the tyres shifting a bit because of the deeper tread I suspect, I had the exact same on my old series 3 when I fitted M/T tyres to it.

I like the hum of off roads tyres in the morning :)
 
Already done some serious off-roading in a Freelander. Only issue was lack of ground clearance, which has now been resolved ;)
And if it does need a head gasket, the car will still not have cost me much at all.
As said, try buying a Defender for £500 ;)



Done that. Cut them down to level with the top of the chassis rails. Only way to cure it fully would be to cut a chunk out of the chassis rail, and have it welded up...



Drives all right, apart from the tyre noise. Never noticed how noisy M/T tyres are, but a Freebie is a bit more 'refined' than a tractor, so you notice it more

Front end feels a bit light. Not sure if the tracking is still out, or whether its down to the tyres. Will need to stick the alloys + A/T tyres back on, and see what happens, and have the tracking checked, at least...

Mine was horrible at first. Camber bolts improved it no end, but it improved over the fist 100 miles or so. I think the tyres needed to settle in a bit.
It handles pretty well now. It does roll more, but I'm happy with it.
 
The light front end will prob be down to the tyres shifting a bit because of the deeper tread I suspect, I had the exact same on my old series 3 when I fitted M/T tyres to it.

I like the hum of off roads tyres in the morning :)


Mine was horrible at first. Camber bolts improved it no end, but it improved over the fist 100 miles or so. I think the tyres needed to settle in a bit.
It handles pretty well now. It does roll more, but I'm happy with it.

Have now done around 200 miles in it. Tyres have quitened down fairly well. It is now bearable at 60/70mph. Still a horrific whine at 30mph though, 28 or 32 is fine though :rolleyes:
Still a light front end, but its fine with normal tyres on it

Camber bolts are a must, at least on the front end, and preferably a 4 wheel alignment. Cheap enough when you have access to the equipment ;)
 
How do you find the handling on road cornering / roll etc? think about it myself but i do a fair amount of road driving with weight in the back..

Just done 340 mile round trip to the Bristol show. Really happy with the handling and the brakes. Biggest issue was mendip hills with the large tyres and gearing!:)
2" lift. 225/75/16 mud terrains. Camber bolts.
 
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