I think @GrumpyGel has done a lot of work on his.Has anyone here ever rebuilt an IRD? I just broke the casing of my 1.8 so I'll have to rehouse the internals into another one, probably the one from our old crashed TD4 that sat in the back garden for two years (just the IRD, not the car).
Has anyone here ever rebuilt an IRD? I just broke the casing of my 1.8 so I'll have to rehouse the internals into another one, probably the one from our old crashed TD4 that sat in the back garden for two years (just the IRD, not the car).
TBH, I extracted the IRD, bought a rebuild kit... and handed it over to a diff shop to do all the pulling and pushing of bearings.I think @GrumpyGel has done a lot of work on his.
Forgive me if this is a stupid question cause I don't know much about Auto gearboxes but have you figured out what rpm the torque converter will tighten up and send drive to the gearbox?
I'm not even sure if any of that makes sense but hopefully you know what I mean.
Reason I ask is it just occurred a few years ago I had a Skoda Octavia with a DSG gearbox and it was hopeless pulling away on a hill until the turbo finally kicked in. I know they are completely different gearboxes but as much as I love the K series it is a revvy engine that doesn't have much torque.
It wouldn't be nice to go to all this work to discover the car can't pull away on a hill.
I hope this is a stupid question but I thought it worth asking
Those gear ratios, I'm sure, relate to the final drive ratio in the gearbox.according to this post https://www.landyzone.co.uk/land-rover/final-drive-ratio.199952/
the ratios are:-
Td4 engine with manual gearbox 3.182 : 1
Td4 engine with automatic gearbox 2.91 : 1
K1.8 engine 4.200 : 1
KV6 engine 3.66 : 1
so, only a K1.8 IRD will match my rear diff. Also it's the highest reduction ratio available which is what I need for a 1.8 that never goes on fast roads.
Those gear ratios, I'm sure, relate to the final drive ratio in the gearbox.
The IRDs are the same.
Look at the 2nd post in that thread.
I think that inside those gearboxes, where a diff might go in a 2WD implementation, there is a final drive gearing bringing the output down to the speeds that the IRD/prop/rear diff work with.
Please double check this though.
Is the broken case IRD still in a condition that you can turn the input shaft by hand and it will turn the rear pinion?This post suggests that different IRDs have different ratios: https://www.landyzone.co.uk/land-ro...l-v6-in-a-1-8l-freelander.220935/post-2629662
When I was converting my car to EV I had no clue how successful it would be or how powerful or practical. I was doing it for the fun and challenge so I totally get what you are doing. Thanks for keeping at this.I don't know the specific answer, but, it is part of the reason that I want to stick with a 1.8 K series IRD as it gives the lowest gear ratios possible, which will help. It should be geared about 8% lower than the V6.