Suggestions for Repair on newly acquired vehicle
#1
Suggestions for Repair on newly acquired vehicle
Hey yall,
Was wondering if there were any no-brainer things to check for after getting a Disco II? Currently I have 118k on the odometer and the timing chain, head gasket, valve cover gaskets, and spark plugs were changed by the dealers mechanics.
At the moment, I hear/feel vibration coming from what I can only imagine is the driveshaft. This only happens under acceleration from 20-60 mph, and when downshifting. Can someone confirm this noise?
Other than this, Can you fill me in on what I should look for?
I am new to the forum, and fairly new to working on cars so I apologize in advance if these questions seem trivial and "Doh!".
Taylor
Was wondering if there were any no-brainer things to check for after getting a Disco II? Currently I have 118k on the odometer and the timing chain, head gasket, valve cover gaskets, and spark plugs were changed by the dealers mechanics.
At the moment, I hear/feel vibration coming from what I can only imagine is the driveshaft. This only happens under acceleration from 20-60 mph, and when downshifting. Can someone confirm this noise?
Other than this, Can you fill me in on what I should look for?
I am new to the forum, and fairly new to working on cars so I apologize in advance if these questions seem trivial and "Doh!".
Taylor
#2
#3
Search up on the front propshaft. Get yourself familiar with what one looks like with grease fittings. Compare a new "fully serviceable" propshaft with grease fittings to yours. If you do not see the fittings, stop driving and replace it immediately.
Chirping is a tell tale sign that the Rover fairy is getting ready to implant an inspection window into the side of your Trans. You don't want the fairy coming around while your cruising down the highway.
Chirping is a tell tale sign that the Rover fairy is getting ready to implant an inspection window into the side of your Trans. You don't want the fairy coming around while your cruising down the highway.
Last edited by coors; 12-09-2015 at 06:03 PM.
The following users liked this post:
back9sunday (12-09-2015)
#4
Back9, just to be absolutely clear, replacing or rebuilding the front drive shaft is not a "when I get around to it pretty soon" matter. (I know you didn't say that.). Especially given the symptoms you report.
This is a STOP DRIVING IT NOW and get a new driveshaft installed pronto matter.
The bad outcome suffered by all too many others is that one end of the drive shaft comes apart completely while the truck is underway and mercilessly beats a hole in the side of your transmission (the inspection port referred to above). It's no laughing matter, and something that would undoubtedly make you wish you had never heard of Land Rover. It's also been the source for many, many junkyard parts trucks that have helped the rest of us keep our Rovers on the road for many, many years.
When I did my driveshaft a few years ago it made more sense economically to buy the parts and have a local driveline shaft do the rebuilding. Today there are good options for fully serviceable from driveshafts at prices that make it more sensible to take another route. It is literally eight nuts that need to be removed and replaced for you to remove your old driveshaft and install a new one. It seems the going price is a little under $300. That beats another $400-$500 plus labor to install a used transmission, after which you would still need to install a new driveshaft.
This is a STOP DRIVING IT NOW and get a new driveshaft installed pronto matter.
The bad outcome suffered by all too many others is that one end of the drive shaft comes apart completely while the truck is underway and mercilessly beats a hole in the side of your transmission (the inspection port referred to above). It's no laughing matter, and something that would undoubtedly make you wish you had never heard of Land Rover. It's also been the source for many, many junkyard parts trucks that have helped the rest of us keep our Rovers on the road for many, many years.
When I did my driveshaft a few years ago it made more sense economically to buy the parts and have a local driveline shaft do the rebuilding. Today there are good options for fully serviceable from driveshafts at prices that make it more sensible to take another route. It is literally eight nuts that need to be removed and replaced for you to remove your old driveshaft and install a new one. It seems the going price is a little under $300. That beats another $400-$500 plus labor to install a used transmission, after which you would still need to install a new driveshaft.
#5
#9
#10
x2 on the Lucky8 sourced drive shaft. good equipment and good guys- even if they are suspiciously close to Canada. the list of "must do's" is a sticky on the D2 main page, I think it's titled 'major service'. Have a read, do the maintenance- that stuff is just the bare-bones basics for making sure your truck is gonna run. I know mine has been kind enough to give me many other issues to fix/repair in addition to the 90k service. tons of really helpful folks here, welcome!