potus
Well-Known Member
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- South Devon
Haldex, Only the F2
Yeah its a freelander 2 se not too familiar with 4wd this is my first one but bloody love it, such a nice drive, so I am trying to resolve the issue and get it working properly again.Haldex, Only the F2
Bit confusing this. You say the back end slipped on concrete when cornering. Was this caused by speed being too high, road surface being wet or you think the car should have corrected this fault but didn't?So here is a bit more information on the car.
When I got the car the steering angle sensor was causing an issue switching the advanced programs off. There was also a noise where it would clock under acceleration, not knowing any different I was informed this is because the sensor had deactivated the advanced programs , not knowing any better I was told this is caused by the advanced programs being offline and wheels would spin up at different speeds.
This was all fine no problems until about 3 weeks ago the back end slid out on the car on concrete road, after that I started experiencing the pulling and the noise had stopped on acceleration but I had also sorted the steering angle sensor out as well recently, we also found a loose engine mount on the lower side but this was not the problem. I have been told suspension bushes but there is no play, I have checked tyres, all the same brand tread pattern and pressure and tread wear, there is nothing loose under the car and any play in bushes is so minimal its like they are new.
Now someone said it is more likely the diff needs changing and looking into this there are a pair of splined collars that go into the diff before the drive shaft can go in place. So here is my thinking because the wheels are turning as they should and there seems to be no noise or wrong doing from the diff itself could it be that the splines have stripped from (A) one of the collars (B) one of the drive shafts causing a loss of power to one side in turn causing the pulling to the opposite of the car when accelerating.
So at the time the road was wet when it spun out, wasn't speeding, I was on my way to work so road is very familiar, never ever lost control there though it is by the bus depot and could have had oil or diesel on the road from a leaky bus.Bit confusing this. You say the back end slipped on concrete when cornering. Was this caused by speed being too high, road surface being wet or you think the car should have corrected this fault but didn't?
The special programs will disable if theres a fault with something it needs, like the abs. Stability control will also disable, like applying the inner brake if sharp cornering. Traction control will also stop. The haldex activates when pulling away automatically, then disconnects. It will only activate if and when needed after that. It all happens without noticing. You can pull the fuse out to stop it activating to rule it out as a possible fault.
You can see the steering angle sensor value in diagnostics. Turn the wheel to see it live update.
Can you give a list of faults it currently has. Tell us if they're permanent or intermittent.
There has been a thread on here where a F2 spun out for no apparent reason, worth a search to see if a reason was found.So at the time the road was wet when it spun out, wasn't speeding, I was on my way to work so road is very familiar, never ever lost control there though it is by the bus depot and could have had oil or diesel on the road from a leaky bus.
Steering angle sensor was corrected and any faults that it was causing have cleared, its been calibrated and currently has no fault codes.
The fuse seems like a good idea if that's the case I may be able to determine whether the pulling is occurring due to front or rear fault. But I definitely think that its mechanical now as there's no longer any faults flagging up.
Found the nsf drive shaft was loose on the hub took care of that problem persisted. Engine mount problem still there, checked all bushes and mounts and the other hubs, confirmed with my guy we have checked anything I have seen flag up with this issue so far.
Car pulls 9ff in 1st fine 2nd fine 3rd gear and above 30mph accelerate and she pulls heavily to the right release the accelerator and it snaps back to the left, steady consistent speed and acceleration nothing happens or it is very slight.
Driving me nuts because even with the fault with the sensor the car was driving fine until this incident where the back slid out on this corner.
If you put it in grass gravel snow mode, on tarmac, then drive forwards and straight, does it do it them? The FL2 will stay in 4x4 in this mode. It shouldn't make a difference to your problem.So at the time the road was wet when it spun out, wasn't speeding, I was on my way to work so road is very familiar, never ever lost control there though it is by the bus depot and could have had oil or diesel on the road from a leaky bus.
Steering angle sensor was corrected and any faults that it was causing have cleared, its been calibrated and currently has no fault codes.
The fuse seems like a good idea if that's the case I may be able to determine whether the pulling is occurring due to front or rear fault. But I definitely think that its mechanical now as there's no longer any faults flagging up.
Found the nsf drive shaft was loose on the hub took care of that problem persisted. Engine mount problem still there, checked all bushes and mounts and the other hubs, confirmed with my guy we have checked anything I have seen flag up with this issue so far.
Car pulls 9ff in 1st fine 2nd fine 3rd gear and above 30mph accelerate and she pulls heavily to the right release the accelerator and it snaps back to the left, steady consistent speed and acceleration nothing happens or it is very slight.
Driving me nuts because even with the fault with the sensor the car was driving fine until this incident where the back slid out on this corner.
I've been trying to find this thread, but haven't been able to. IIRC it was a fella who's wife had been driving the car when it spun out.There has been a thread on here where a F2 spun out for no apparent reason, worth a search to see if a reason was found.
Traditional rack and pinion setup. Power steering pump powered by the engine. Fluid reservoir has a fixed mesh filter. Power steering assistance varies with speed. In addition to that the steering wheel has a position sensor signal. That signal feeds into the calculations for things like the stability control and abs braking. Also used to indicate front wheel direction on the dash, when using terrain response.Does the Freelander 2 have electric power steering?
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