kernowsvenski
Well-Known Member
Looking great. What top coat did you use in the end?Sub frame painted
Have most parts now to change over
Can any give me the part numbers for the 4 subframe bolts? Freelander 1 2006
Looking great. What top coat did you use in the end?Sub frame painted
Have most parts now to change over
Can any give me the part numbers for the 4 subframe bolts? Freelander 1 2006
That's a great website isn't it! A most helpful resource.Genuine Front & Rear Subframes For Land Rover Freelander 1996 - 2006 Classic (l314) | Jaguar Land Rover Classic Parts
parts.jaguarlandroverclassic.com
Hi, hope your keeping well, yeah sure is as it has all the prices as well. I've noticed a lot of genuine bits on flea bay are often over priced & some s/h bits are close to new or dearer ! I always check before buying bits.That's a great website isn't it! A most helpful resource.
My mate as a body shop so I asked him to do it next time he had something black to paintLooking great. What top coat did you use in the end?
I have zero loyalty to any part seller but i must admit they have impressed me with the speed and price and the warrantyHi, hope your keeping well, yeah sure is as it has all the prices as well. I've noticed a lot of genuine bits on flea bay are often over priced & some s/h bits are close to new or dearer ! I always check before buying bits.
Very handy. Well done.My mate as a body shop so I asked him to do it next time he had something black to paint
Very handy. Well done.
Its better than a rattle can or brush painting and hopefully will be easier to keep than if it was powder coatedVery handy. Well done.
So I've managed to source a replacement which will be arriving tomorrow. I will need to inspect it upon arrival but if it's okay I will be getting it shot blasted, and depending on the price I may get it thermal metal sprayed. There are a couple of firms local to me that do it. If that's too pricey it'll be Bonda primed and I'll paint it myself.Its better than a rattle can or brush painting and hopefully will be easier to keep than if it was powder coated
I'd just Bonda primer and then stone chip over the top. I've seen Bonda hold of rust for a decade on blasted steel. It's absolutely amazing stuff.So I've managed to source a replacement which will be arriving tomorrow. I will need to inspect it upon arrival but if it's okay I will be getting it shot blasted, and depending on the price I may get it thermal metal sprayed. There are a couple of firms local to me that do it. If that's too pricey it'll be Bonda primed and I'll paint it myself.
and this is the king of things Ring door bells were invented forYesterday I dragged mine into our garage as it is currently immobile due to a broken gear linkage.
I have a cheap hand winch bolted to the workbench for this purpose. The drive slopes up slightly to the garage and there is a lip of about an inch at the door. I had the front tyres almost over the lip and was heaving with all my strength on the winch when the cable snapped.
The Freelander shot backwards and I shot after it thinking it would roll right down the drive and out onto the road.
But I had dragged my trailer up behind it after it broke down so the Landrover hit the trailer with a crash, then like a giant Newton's cradle, the Freelander stopped dead and the trailer started to lurch down the drive with me running after it like someone in a youtube "fail" video.
Thankfully I managed to grab the brake lever and stop it before it did any damage. Then I re-tied the winch and got the car into the garage. But I'm now nursing a very painful ankle which I must have strained when the cable broke, or in the mad dash afterwards. So it will probably be next weekend before I can get underneath and inspect the gear linkage.
Add a few tinnies to that and you can get in serious troubleEBay and the boredom a bad mixture
I once had a winch cable snap while lowering a wind turbine (old project).Yesterday I dragged mine into our garage as it is currently immobile due to a broken gear linkage.
I have a cheap hand winch bolted to the workbench for this purpose. The drive slopes up slightly to the garage and there is a lip of about an inch at the door. I had the front tyres almost over the lip and was heaving with all my strength on the winch when the cable snapped.
The Freelander shot backwards and I shot after it thinking it would roll right down the drive and out onto the road.
But I had dragged my trailer up behind it after it broke down so the Landrover hit the trailer with a crash, then like a giant Newton's cradle, the Freelander stopped dead and the trailer started to lurch down the drive with me running after it like someone in a youtube "fail" video.
Thankfully I managed to grab the brake lever and stop it before it did any damage. Then I re-tied the winch and got the car into the garage. But I'm now nursing a very painful ankle which I must have strained when the cable broke, or in the mad dash afterwards. So it will probably be next weekend before I can get underneath and inspect the gear linkage.
I have a similar tale of a near miss from a snapping cable. This one could have been horrendous. I was an apprentice in a boat yard that built fishing boats and yachts. We'd just completed a 33ft fast fishing boat and it had been wheeled out of the shed and was being craned onto a low loader to head off for launching. It was about a foot off the trailer when the crane cable gave way and six tons of brand new boat dropped on to the trailer, and the hook came down and went through the deck. There were loads of us nearby and one person on board but luckily nobody was injured.I once had a winch cable snap while lowering a wind turbine (old project).
Thankfully I had warned eveyone to stay well clear before starting the job so no one hurt. In fact the only injury was my B&D Workmate table thing which the turbine landed on crushing it like a tin can and absorbing the impact.
I got lucky that day and it sounds like you did too.
Any news on the mpg your better half achieved ?I allowed my infinitely better half to drive my FL2 down to Norfolk from Argyll. I cunningly rest the trip computer just before she left so it'll be interesting to see what mpg she achieves. I've been averaging 34.2 for the past couple of thousand miles.
I've always maintained she's a less conservative driver than me. Where I'll read the road ahead and lift off the loud pedal when I see the car in front getting closer, or traffic lights likely to change to red, or a change in the speed limit from 60 to 40 to 30 (20 in Wales), she'll go straight from throttle to brakes.