Landysi

New Member
First of all hi to all! I am a newbie on this site and i am hoping that you will be able to help me out. I have a 1996 Defender 110 and have just fitted it out with OME shocks and springs giving around a 2inch lift. Also fitted the castor correction bushes. However since the lift i seem to have a wining noise somewhere in the driveline which comes in at around 45mph but only seems to be under load. Any suggestions as to the cause would be much appreciated.

Thanks Si
 
dont take one persons misfortune with a lift that they all do ive had no probs with mine and i know shed loads of pepes that have no probs..infact i know more people who own allsorts of landys that have no probs than i know people who have probs,
 
dont take one persons misfortune with a lift that they all do ive had no probs with mine and i know shed loads of pepes that have no probs..infact i know more people who own allsorts of landys that have no probs than i know people who have probs,


I wish i was one of the people that had no problems. I also know people that have not had a problem! Typical landy all different!
 
Advise regarding the prop shaft is correct, but you have exagerated the problem with the castor correcting bushes.

IME there is often little need for castor correction with a 2 inch lift.
 
i run a 4" lift without any correction and its not to bad,i dont get any prop judda.av got the correction arms but ant got round to fittin em!
 
tre did you only fit the wide yoke to the front prop? is the rear one ok?

just curious as i changed the 1st UJ on mine the other week. front nearest the T-box.
 
tre did you only fit the wide yoke to the front prop? is the rear one ok?

just curious as i changed the 1st UJ on mine the other week. front nearest the T-box.

I had to fit both.
I'm wondering if he might be OK with his rear one though, because it's longer on a 110, therefore the 2" lift gives it a shallower angle.
 
Advise regarding the prop shaft is correct, but you have exagerated the problem with the castor correcting bushes.

IME there is often little need for castor correction with a 2 inch lift.

Hi! I wouls have thought that fitting the castor correction bushes would have helped. How come it would make it worse?
 
I had to fit both.
I'm wondering if he might be OK with his rear one though, because it's longer on a 110, therefore the 2" lift gives it a shallower angle.

Hi tre hope you are right but knowing my luck it will be both! I will try removing the front prop tomorrow. Where do i get a wide yoke prop from? Any idea on cost?
 
Hi! I wouls have thought that fitting the castor correction bushes would have helped. How come it would make it worse?

Lifting the suspension, without correcting the castor, results in the axle itself being rotated, such that the diff nose points upwards slightly (by about 3 degrees for a 2" lift). Correcting the castor helps with bump-steer and steering self-centering, but puts the diff nose back parallel with the ground so that the propshaft ends up at a sharper angle.
 
Hi tre hope you are right but knowing my luck it will be both! I will try removing the front prop tomorrow. Where do i get a wide yoke prop from? Any idea on cost?

I got mine from my local Landy Independent dealer for about 90 quid. Made by Bearmach I think.
They're sometimes for sale on flea-bay too.
 
Lifting the suspension, without correcting the castor, results in the axle itself being rotated, such that the diff nose points upwards slightly (by about 3 degrees for a 2" lift). Correcting the castor helps with bump-steer and steering self-centering, but puts the diff nose back parallel with the ground so that the propshaft ends up at a sharper angle.

Unless yu use castor corrected swivels, which allow the diff to remain rotated, but corrects the steering.
 
Any advantage to using a double cardon prop as apposed to wide yoke prop?
Not that I know of.
They are a lot more expensive and are only needed with extreme lifts as far as I know.
Wide-yoke props cured my whining / vibration problems.
 

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