First a summary of what happened
I have a freelander 1 TD4 from 2006
I have for years heard noises from the rear, thinking the diff might give up at some point.
1 month ago I got 2 new tyres on the rear axle, and everything was good. A few days ago, I started hearing what I thought was a wheel bearing rumble, and it quickly got worse.
Also at low speed making tight turns I sometimes hear loud stuttering clunking noises from the rear.
After a 45km drive, I smelled something hot, so I measured the rear diff with a laser to be 130 degrees celcius on the outside! (I unfortunately didn't think of measuring the VCU temp.)
So I stopped driving it.
I have done the 120cm bar with 5kg drop test to check the VCU, and it took around 60-70 seconds to get from 1:30 to 3, so it doesn't seem too bad and I can also spin it by hand with some big pliers.
I don't know if it's the unmatched wheel sizes that could have caused it, but I will for sure replace the front tyres as well now.
However I think the rear diff is dead based on the sounds and temps it has experienced.
Then some questions
I'm just thinking if there is anything else I should be aware of or test/check?
And if anyone knows somewhere in EU (Not in the UK) where they sell remanufactured rear diffs?
As I live in Denmark and all sellers i find is in UK, but it's too expensive with customs/ import taxes from the UK.
And before buying another rear diff, does all freelander 1's use the same rear diff?
- When looking visually on my diff it says "51441 174" on the side of the housing, but when searching for used ones online I also find some that has these numbers on the side "47098 174" and when looking up my freelander on my VIN number I find these two numbers "TVK000180" and "LR006009" so I'm really in doubt which rear diff to get to be sure. My gut tells me to buy one with the same number on the side as my current. But maybe someone knows if they're in fact identical, or if there are different ratio diff's?
And finally, based on my VCU drop test, doesn't it seem fine? I know people are saying around 45 seconds, but I guess it depends on exactly where you start the drop from, as it goes very slow at the top.
I have a freelander 1 TD4 from 2006
I have for years heard noises from the rear, thinking the diff might give up at some point.
1 month ago I got 2 new tyres on the rear axle, and everything was good. A few days ago, I started hearing what I thought was a wheel bearing rumble, and it quickly got worse.
Also at low speed making tight turns I sometimes hear loud stuttering clunking noises from the rear.
After a 45km drive, I smelled something hot, so I measured the rear diff with a laser to be 130 degrees celcius on the outside! (I unfortunately didn't think of measuring the VCU temp.)
So I stopped driving it.
I have done the 120cm bar with 5kg drop test to check the VCU, and it took around 60-70 seconds to get from 1:30 to 3, so it doesn't seem too bad and I can also spin it by hand with some big pliers.
I don't know if it's the unmatched wheel sizes that could have caused it, but I will for sure replace the front tyres as well now.
However I think the rear diff is dead based on the sounds and temps it has experienced.
Then some questions
I'm just thinking if there is anything else I should be aware of or test/check?
And if anyone knows somewhere in EU (Not in the UK) where they sell remanufactured rear diffs?
As I live in Denmark and all sellers i find is in UK, but it's too expensive with customs/ import taxes from the UK.
And before buying another rear diff, does all freelander 1's use the same rear diff?
- When looking visually on my diff it says "51441 174" on the side of the housing, but when searching for used ones online I also find some that has these numbers on the side "47098 174" and when looking up my freelander on my VIN number I find these two numbers "TVK000180" and "LR006009" so I'm really in doubt which rear diff to get to be sure. My gut tells me to buy one with the same number on the side as my current. But maybe someone knows if they're in fact identical, or if there are different ratio diff's?
And finally, based on my VCU drop test, doesn't it seem fine? I know people are saying around 45 seconds, but I guess it depends on exactly where you start the drop from, as it goes very slow at the top.