Hippo
Lord Hippo
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Be very careful with that. I did just that thinking there was nowt wrong with mine until it sounded like ww2 under my car when the outrigger collapsed. Saftey first use known jacking points. Now I have a double pain in the a$$. I have a welding job on and no car becasue the MOT is out :-(
+1Have you loosened the bolt and removed the collar?
If so wind the bolt out until the head is proud, then jam a cold chisel in between the bolt head and the UJ and take a heavy hammer to it. If you're lucky it'll shift fairly easily but don't be surprised it you have to beat merry hell out of it and end up ruining the bolt and possibly the UJ.
Had a bit of a moment where the VCU suddenly dropped a bit - turns out you can't hang it from one bolt, cos it's all swivelly flexible bearings.
Then losen the 4 bolts on the support bearings a bit, then get a trolley jack under the VCU and remove the 4 bolts. Lower the VCU on the trolly jack.
Loosen the bolt first, take out the U 'washer', probably do the bolt up a bit, jam a chisel down the join of the UJ pressing against the bolt ans slightly poking past the UJ on 'exit' side - hit with hammer. This will push the prop away from the VCU a little bit. Withdraw the chisel, undo bolt a bit more and repeat.
I always planned to lower the VCU on the jack, just got a bit ahead of myself taking out too many bolts before I was ready to drop itMaybe next time...
Then losen the 4 bolts on the support bearings a bit, then get a trolley jack under the VCU and remove the 4 bolts. Lower the VCU on the trolly jack.
I found that the chisel wouldn't fly out when hitting it - quite the reverse, it got lodged in there and needed a tap to get it back out - but the forces holding it lodged in then ejected it very rapidly once dislodged!We have all done it (Except those that are perfect) so you will need to take the lot off the car. Clamping it down helps when you are smacking it about. Put the bolt and the u washer back in. Open the bolt up just enough so you can get the chisel in. SMACK! The chisel a few times. If the chisel fly’s out, reposition and repeat. It will edge forward a mil at a time off the splines. Open the bolt a little more and keep Appling the loosen juice until it’s off…. Simples.
That's the wayAh - so hitting the chisel downwards using it as a wedge, rather than sideways using it as a lever?
Yip, me too.Come to think of it. I bent my Chisel doing mine
Chisels ain't all the same. A good quality one would be fine whereas our cheap Chinesium ones bend easily.Once again this is probably another issue caused by salt on UK roads! Its probably corroded it a lot more solid than the prop I was dismantling. No sign of warping on my chisel!
Once again this is probably another issue caused by salt on UK roads! Its probably corroded it a lot more solid than the prop I was dismantling. No sign of warping on my chisel!
Yeh, you're right. Where I am in Christchurch its a coastal (sea level) town, so we may not get snow every year here in Chch but we often do - rather like the south of England. Winter temps here will go down well below -5 and most mornings we'll have a hard frost - in fact the hard frosts are great because it means its going to be a fantastic dayObviously not wishing to troll the freelander section!
But just out of interest, is there no road salt in NZ? I thought Sarf Island was quite cold, especially the higher bits. IIRC there are quite a few ski resorts, which to my mind would suggest snow and ice?
Obviously not wishing to troll the freelander section!
But just out of interest, is there no road salt in NZ? I thought Sarf Island was quite cold, especially the higher bits. IIRC there are quite a few ski resorts, which to my mind would suggest snow and ice?
Always thought they were made out of steelI use an old brass tank
Bench test figures in this post are approx to about the nearest second. I will delete the values in this post and replace it with a link to the full bench test results with different weights in the main vcu testing fred soon, when I put them up after timing them all. Figures are the same when my vcu was brand new and after a few thousand miles.Previous post question got missed in the banter !
SO ...........
Did anyone compare the time for a 45 deg turn with VCU on the car to the time for a 45 degree with VCU off the car?
If rear axle ratio is about 3:1 then would it be about 1/3 of the time - or is it not that simple??
Just thought that if we knew the conversion factor for on or off the car we can test when refurbed before fitting !
Just bought a tight VCU to refurb and it times at 25 secs on the bench. would this have been about 75 secs on the car??
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