Is it diesel or petrol? There are a coup!e of things that helped mine a bit. I swaped the oil bath air filter for a more performance style one, it helped it breath a bit better but there is now more induction noise. I also fitted an electronic dizzy, I dont think it makes it any faster but it certainly helps for better starting and smoother running. You could maybe try different jets in the carb or a different carb altogether. I havent tried this cos carbs are a dark art to me. There is an Australian company that sells four branch manifolds which should help but they aint cheap. Other than that, its a case of making sure the valve gaps are right and maybe a thinner oil. What are your compression figures like and whats the mileage?
Col
Yes, I would agree although removing it does reduce the weight by a couple of kilos or so. Its had to make a series landy go faster unless there is summat wrong with it. I drove mine once with no brakes and that made it feel very fast.Dont forget the oil bath filter offers little to no resistance to air flow.
I have one on my tdi, great things.
Kept the British army going in Iraq.
Yes, I would agree although removing it does reduce the weight by a couple of kilos or so. Its had to make a series landy go faster unless there is summat wrong with it. I drove mine once with no brakes and that made it feel very fast.
Col
Land Cruiser Amazon. Plenty of power.Hi all
I have a 1962 series 2a and it all runs smoothly ( touch wood). The only problem is that being an old Land Rover it’s a bit low on grunt. Is there any ways I can improve the power without a full engine conversion. Maybe a straight through exhaust? Any help would be great.
Sorry I should have said at the start. It’s a 2.25 petrol. I think I’ll keep an electronic start in my mind but the engine starts and runs fine at the moment. I might try an SU carb as they have been recommmended to me before. Seeing as I’m not exactly a dab hand when it comes to carbs either how much hassle is that likely to involve? I’m sorry but I have no idea about the compression figures but the mileage is just over 50 000Is it diesel or petrol? There are a coup!e of things that helped mine a bit. I swaped the oil bath air filter for a more performance style one, it helped it breath a bit better but there is now more induction noise. I also fitted an electronic dizzy, I dont think it makes it any faster but it certainly helps for better starting and smoother running. You could maybe try different jets in the carb or a different carb altogether. I havent tried this cos carbs are a dark art to me. There is an Australian company that sells four branch manifolds which should help but they aint cheap. Other than that, its a case of making sure the valve gaps are right and maybe a thinner oil. What are your compression figures like and whats the mileage?
Col
Yeah I’ve seen these before. Always looked promising but a little pricey for me at the minute.If you got plenty cash to spare
https://www.turnerengineering.co.uk/Performance-Heads
You may get a marginal difference with those things, but it won't make much difference, due to the gearing.Sorry I should have said at the start. It’s a 2.25 petrol. I think I’ll keep an electronic start in my mind but the engine starts and runs fine at the moment. I might try an SU carb as they have been recommmended to me before. Seeing as I’m not exactly a dab hand when it comes to carbs either how much hassle is that likely to involve? I’m sorry but I have no idea about the compression figures but the mileage is just over 50 000
Its my dads old one been sitting in a field for years. Probably safe to say the cylinder head hasn’t been off for a while. I think I will look into upgrading to an SU carb. Its been recommended a lot and seems to be within my skill set.Assuming it's a petrol and assuming it's an old carb in it, a better (SU) carb along with a tune up and service will work wonders. If the head hasn't been off in many years, reseating/grinding the valves in might well help too
Try setting the tappets first. If the valves don't open very much, there won't be much power.Its my dads old one been sitting in a field for years. Probably safe to say the cylinder head hasn’t been off for a while. I think I will look into upgrading to an SU carb. Its been recommended a lot and seems to be within my skill set.
I fitted an overdrive a few years ago and that’s been great. As u say it’s perfectly fine around lanes and back roads I was just wondering if there were any ways to give it a little more power for those hills and motorways?You may get a marginal difference with those things, but it won't make much difference, due to the gearing.
You can only get the factor of the max revs, times the gearing through the drive train, will equal the max revs of the wheels, which is your top speed.
So if you want to go faster, you need to add extra gearing, either by an overdrive, or bigger tyres, or a higher range transfer box, or higher ratio diffs.
We have a petrol Series 2a, and to be honest, performance is fine, except maybe on a motorway.
Speedo indicates about 55mph cruising, and because the standard tyres would be 6x16s, and it actually has 7.50x16s, the actual speed is probably more than 60mph.
Quite adequate for country lanes, round town, and A road cruising.
Thanks for the advice but I’ve done tappets already and surprisingly they were all right.Try setting the tappets first. If the valves don't open very much, there won't be much power.
There are, as above, and other things.I fitted an overdrive a few years ago and that’s been great. As u say it’s perfectly fine around lanes and back roads I was just wondering if there were any ways to give it a little more power for those hills and motorways?
You make a very good point. If I’m honest I don’t do many long journeys in it and I live in Herefordshire so a lot of the roads are small lanes where it’s perfectly fine. I was just wondering if there were some small tweaks that could give it some more power but it seems not.There are, as above, and other things.
But it seems a shame to reduce the originality, and for long journeys probably easier to spend the money on a car.