Good question. I have a couple of old VCU's lying in the garage so will have to give them a test on the bench. At some stage I'll refurb one or both and test again.Previous post question got missed in the banter !
SO ...........
Did anyone compare the time for a 45 deg turn with VCU on the car to the time for a 45 degree with VCU off the car?
If rear axle ratio is about 3:1 then would it be about 1/3 of the time - or is it not that simple??
Just thought that if we knew the conversion factor for on or off the car we can test when refurbed before fitting !
Just bought a tight VCU to refurb and it times at 25 secs on the bench. would this have been about 75 secs on the car??
Agreed. I'm guessing the bench times will be a lot less than the fitted times.Good question. I have a couple of old VCU's lying in the garage so will have to give them a test on the bench. At some stage I'll refurb one or both and test again.
I guess the only way to be 100% certain is to try it both on the car and on the bench and compare the findings.
It is much easier to remove the whole thing as separating the propshafts from the VCU can be a right mare of a job. Removing the propshaft is simple enough to do but will probably take a couple of hours by the time you jack up the car and faff about. It's much easier if you jack up both rear wheels as then you can turn the rear diff for access to all the bolts. I normally use 1/4 hex sockets on the torx bolts as my torx socket set is 1/2" and they are too fat to reach. Up to now it's worked fine on four cars.Taken my eye off this thread for a bit, but I've just ordered the kit from Bell this morning. It'll arrive some time next week, but I might not be able to fit it for a little while.
Every time I go round a corner now I'm thinking of the poor IRD grinding away. I do have some time this weekend (before the VCU kit arrives) so I thought of maybe removing one of the propshafts. Two reasons - one to relieve any strain on the system (running temporarily in 2wd mode), and two to get a feel for how hard the whole job is likely to be and hence whether I want to take it on or take the car to a garage (LR specialist near me is always booked up forever, so it would be a general backstreet place I've used before).
Is this a daft idea? Can the shaft be removed just by undoing the bolts at the flange end and sliding the other out of the VCU?
Cheers,
Pete
It is much easier to remove the whole thing as separating the propshafts from the VCU can be a right mare of a job. It's a simple enough to do but will probably take a couple of hours by the time you jack up the car and faff about. It's much easier if you jack up both rear wheels as then you can turn the rear diff for access to all the bolts. I normally use 1/4 hex sockets on the torx bolts as my torx socket set is 1/2" and they are too fat to reach. Up to now it's worked fine on four cars.
It can all be done asre end up or front end up. It would be better if you had a second pair of hands as that lot is heavy. Best get yourself a set of long nose female torx sockets to make your life easier as you could round them using the other method (I did the first time I did mine) Take a look at thisOk - so undo the flange bolts both ends, and the mounting bolts for the VCU bearings, and drop the whole lot off in one piece?
What's the best order to do it all in? I guess I could take out all but one of the flange bolts each end, and half of the VCU ones, before I need to worry what comes off first...
I have a trolley jack which can go under the cross-member at the back and lift the whole lot up, then put axle stands under the side rails or somewhere else handy. Will I end up needing to jack the front as well at any point, or just the arse end?
Thanks a lot for the help, this feels like a big job by my standards
Pete
It can all be done asre end up or front end up. It would be better if you had a second pair of hands as that lot is heavy. Best get yourself a set of long nose female torx sockets to make your life easier as you could round them using the other method (I did the first time I did mine) Take a look at this
I have comparison figures for my new vcu. Mentioned in post 19. Will find them and put them up soonPrevious post question got missed in the banter !
SO ...........
Did anyone compare the time for a 45 deg turn with VCU on the car to the time for a 45 degree with VCU off the car?
If rear axle ratio is about 3:1 then would it be about 1/3 of the time - or is it not that simple??
Just thought that if we knew the conversion factor for on or off the car we can test when refurbed before fitting !
Just bought a tight VCU to refurb and it times at 25 secs on the bench. would this have been about 75 secs on the car??
Anyone who is fit enough to get under a car can remove the props - its not difficult.Ok - so undo the flange bolts both ends, and the mounting bolts for the VCU bearings, and drop the whole lot off in one piece?
What's the best order to do it all in? I guess I could take out all but one of the flange bolts each end, and half of the VCU ones, before I need to worry what comes off first...
I have a trolley jack which can go under the cross-member at the back and lift the whole lot up, then put axle stands under the side rails or somewhere else handy. Will I end up needing to jack the front as well at any point, or just the arse end?
Thanks a lot for the help, this feels like a big job by my standards
Pete
If you're like me, you will hate getting under a car that is on axle stands. I wouldn't do it in the UK, and I definitely won't do it here where an earthquake can occur at any time! I raised the car up by driving/jacking it on to paving slabs (possibly only on 1 side). If you have some HippoRamps all-the-better. This meant I could get under to remove the accessible bolts, then push the car forward a little to turn the prop shaft to get to the others.
The first time I removed the props I used normal sockets, but its easier and you won't break the heads if you have a set of Torx sockets.
Hopefully you won't have to remove the support bearings from the VCU. If you do, and you don't have a hub puller, that's a 'hit it hard' job - then 'hit it even harder' - then 'hit it as hard as you can' job.
I favour large blocks of wood instead of axle stands. There's much less chance of the car tipping off blocks. I always leave the trolley jack under there too.That's an interesting idea. I don't love going under a car on stands (and I usually leave the jack in position and lightly loaded, as backup) but I put up with it. I do have some concrete blocks (breeze-block size, but solid) which I could maybe drive up onto - how far does the car need to roll to turn the shaft over?
Don't suppose you happen to know what size? And someone else suggested deep ones - are these necessary or will normal length do? I'm not going to bodge it with ordinary hex sockets on something like this.
I do have a small 2-legged puller I originally got for pulling the propeller off a boat. Might work. Or failing that, hitting things is something I can do. But I'm using an exchange VCU from Bell's and have to send the old one back, so if I can't get the things off I suppose I'll just send the whole lot back
.
All the videos talk a lot about marking the parts to reassemble them correctly balanced. I can do that with the U-shaped washer, but of course the VCU will be new. I guess the rotational position of that relative to the shafts doesn't matter?
Thanks,
Pete
The VCU bearings can be removed with a [gigantic] puller like this.
That's an interesting idea. I don't love going under a car on stands (and I usually leave the jack in position and lightly loaded, as backup) but I put up with it. I do have some concrete blocks (breeze-block size, but solid) which I could maybe drive up onto - how far does the car need to roll to turn the shaft over?
Don't suppose you happen to know what size? And someone else suggested deep ones - are these necessary or will normal length do? I'm not going to bodge it with ordinary hex sockets on something like this.
I do have a small 2-legged puller I originally got for pulling the propeller off a boat. Might work. Or failing that, hitting things is something I can do. But I'm using an exchange VCU from Bell's and have to send the old one back, so if I can't get the things off I suppose I'll just send the whole lot back
.
All the videos talk a lot about marking the parts to reassemble them correctly balanced. I can do that with the U-shaped washer, but of course the VCU will be new. I guess the rotational position of that relative to the shafts doesn't matter?
Thanks,
Pete
That is correct young-nBy the way, I assume there's no problem with driving the car around for a couple of weeks with the propshafts missing? I think I've heard of people doing this long-term rather than replacing the VCU...
Pete
I've gone 6-ton. That's strong enough to cope with my lardy arse sitting in it! Same price as Machine Mart and, like all SGS stuff, really good quality.
http://www.sgs-engineering.com/garage-equipment/axle-stands/jsr3-axle-stands