don't know about your tri rover part but maxi drive is no more but hightuff I belive still do the axles
just stripped a maxidrive flange and damaged axle on my defender 130.was quoted 450 for good used pair or 495 for new maxidrive flanges with new uprated axles[not maxidrive] from tri rov spares.anyone had experience with this setup'dont know which way to go.![]()
don't know about your tri rover part but maxi drive is no more but hightuff I belive still do the axles
I had this happen to my 110 County some years ago. I have a maxi fitted to the rear Salisbury and stripped the spline on the flange and damaged the axle (it had to be the locker axle with the dog splines on it). I bought a new axle and threw both flanges away and refitted standard county flanges (FRC5806). This way only the flange is the weak spot (relatively speaking) and it shouldn't damage the axle if it does give way. A lot cheaper than replacing axles. So far there is no wear at all. I would stick with the genuine axle. .....Brian
It's not broken. It's "Carbon Neutral".
gone
1993 Defender 110 ute "Doris"
1994 Range Rover Vogue LSE "The Luxo-Barge"
1994 Defender 130 HCPU "Rolly"
1996 Discovery 1
current
1995 Defender 130 HCPU and Suzuki GSX1400
Bearman that is an interesting thought ..landy ones were designed to have sacrificial parts under extreme hardship and the price is right ...should my maxi's ever give out i think i will go Land Rover for what I do they would be fine, and I don't plan to drive it like a ralley car in the rough I have to use it for work on monday lol
While we are on the topic of axles John, any guesses on the materials and heat treatment processes used here?
A KAM Aerospace 9403 Nm
B KAM HD 7132 Nm
C Land Rover 4800 Nm
On the top two they went to so much trouble making a smooth transition either side of the seal area, I am surprised they aren't properly waisted
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/attachment...t-oemlr-v2.jpg
Sorry Ben, I have no idea.
The term aerospace material could be anything. All materials used in aircraft construction need an AMS (aerospace material specification), even plain carbon steels.
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