Glyn D
Active Member
I know this has been asked before but I've read through the other threads and tried lots of the advice. Figured it was about time I started a new thread...
When going at approx 50mph, I get steering judder in my Defender 90 300tdi
This lot is brand new:
If I let off the throttle it seems to stop.
Importantly, removing the front prop and putting the diff lock on completely eliminates the judder.
Originally, after following the Haynes manual and this video:
I had the male end of the prop attached to the front diff. Also, after reading through posts about advancing one end of the prop because the front diff is at an angle, I had the two prop ends 45 degrees out of phase.
I tried 45 degrees in both directions but it made no difference, so I then tried it with them in phase but I still got the steering judder.
After more reading I found that the Haynes manual is wrong and the male end of the front prop should in fact attach to the transfer box. With the prop now the right way around, I've tried it 45 degrees and 22.5 degrees out of phase.
I seem to get the least amount of judder with the two ends of the prop perfectly in phase but I'm not able to eliminate it completely; at 50mph I still get steering judder which vibrates through the whole car.
As I was reading this back it made me realise that changing the phasing does seem to influence the judder which makes me think it is prop related. With the male end attached to the transfer box I will need to try 22.5 and 45 degrees in the opposite direction just so I can rule them out.
In the meantime, is there's anything else it could be?
When going at approx 50mph, I get steering judder in my Defender 90 300tdi
This lot is brand new:
- All four wheels and tyres
- Front and rear propshaft
- Swivel housings
- Front stub axles
- Front drive flanges
- Front half shafts
- CV joints
- Front wheel, CV and swivel bearings
- Track rod and ball joints
- Drag link and ball joints
- Steering damper bushes
If I let off the throttle it seems to stop.
Importantly, removing the front prop and putting the diff lock on completely eliminates the judder.
Originally, after following the Haynes manual and this video:
I had the male end of the prop attached to the front diff. Also, after reading through posts about advancing one end of the prop because the front diff is at an angle, I had the two prop ends 45 degrees out of phase.
I tried 45 degrees in both directions but it made no difference, so I then tried it with them in phase but I still got the steering judder.
After more reading I found that the Haynes manual is wrong and the male end of the front prop should in fact attach to the transfer box. With the prop now the right way around, I've tried it 45 degrees and 22.5 degrees out of phase.
I seem to get the least amount of judder with the two ends of the prop perfectly in phase but I'm not able to eliminate it completely; at 50mph I still get steering judder which vibrates through the whole car.
As I was reading this back it made me realise that changing the phasing does seem to influence the judder which makes me think it is prop related. With the male end attached to the transfer box I will need to try 22.5 and 45 degrees in the opposite direction just so I can rule them out.
In the meantime, is there's anything else it could be?