Hammer'n'tongs
Member
- Posts
- 40
- Location
- Penzance
Hi all, hope you're having a good (late) spring. Something's (one of the things) been bothering me since I rebuilt my truck using a discovery 1 axle. I was pleased at the time to be "upgrading" to rear disc brakes!
My truck wears rear tyres out unevenly, and it's not due to incorrect tyre pressures or driving style. Its a discovery 1 300tdi axle on a 90. The problem is worse on the nearside wheel, where the inside of the tread is satisfactory when the outside gets worn bald.
I've stripped off the rear hubs and stub axles as the latter were worn, and so its new stubs and bearings coming. I've had a problem with the calipers wearing out pads on the fluid pipe side, and so I'm gonna have to be vigilant with monitoring pad wear and see that the system is fully bled on a regular basis.
Reaching this stage has given me the opportunity to offer up a straight edge and check the axle ends for squareness. As I hope the photo evidences, the ends have been attached off square, presumably at birth. The offside end is set off by almost a degree, while the nearside end is off by nearly 2 degrees, such that any fitted stub axle is going to point slightly downwards!
It's about 30 years too late to take the issue up with Land Rover, so what can I do about it?
Refitting the nearside axle end (cutting and welding) is out of the question, so I'm thinking of some kind of machined spacer cut to the shape of the gasket from say, 3 mm mild steel plate, ground flat but at an angle to leave 3mm at bottom and 1mm at top, and sandwich it behind the stub axle using a gasket both sides... Can't muck around with the geometry too much as there's the caliper position to consider..
But I'm determined to do something other than refitting tyres in reverse in order to get more use out of tyres.
I will also consider getting a used disco 2 (td5?) rear axle if it will fit, as I gather they come with calipers that "float" on sliding pins...
Any helpful ideas appreciated.
My truck wears rear tyres out unevenly, and it's not due to incorrect tyre pressures or driving style. Its a discovery 1 300tdi axle on a 90. The problem is worse on the nearside wheel, where the inside of the tread is satisfactory when the outside gets worn bald.
I've stripped off the rear hubs and stub axles as the latter were worn, and so its new stubs and bearings coming. I've had a problem with the calipers wearing out pads on the fluid pipe side, and so I'm gonna have to be vigilant with monitoring pad wear and see that the system is fully bled on a regular basis.
Reaching this stage has given me the opportunity to offer up a straight edge and check the axle ends for squareness. As I hope the photo evidences, the ends have been attached off square, presumably at birth. The offside end is set off by almost a degree, while the nearside end is off by nearly 2 degrees, such that any fitted stub axle is going to point slightly downwards!
It's about 30 years too late to take the issue up with Land Rover, so what can I do about it?
Refitting the nearside axle end (cutting and welding) is out of the question, so I'm thinking of some kind of machined spacer cut to the shape of the gasket from say, 3 mm mild steel plate, ground flat but at an angle to leave 3mm at bottom and 1mm at top, and sandwich it behind the stub axle using a gasket both sides... Can't muck around with the geometry too much as there's the caliper position to consider..
But I'm determined to do something other than refitting tyres in reverse in order to get more use out of tyres.
I will also consider getting a used disco 2 (td5?) rear axle if it will fit, as I gather they come with calipers that "float" on sliding pins...
Any helpful ideas appreciated.