Seeing as Rover use Transit engines and gearboxes in the Puma, why not Transit diffs as well? Some years ago I ran modified Transit diffs with Landy hubs and swivels in my series 2a, and even with 36'' tyres, dual wheels all round and 270:1 low low range they were virtually bulletproof.
Beautifully made and finished,(made in Germany) of Salisbury style construction but with threaded side race adjusters, and nice thick axle tubes, they even gave half an inch more ground clearance than Rover diffs.With the transfercase high range gearing changed from 1.21:1 to 1.003;1 the 4.625 ring and pinion ratio shouldn't reduce speed by more than 10% either.
Wagoo.
Forget Ford Transit...I don't have one
I think that Ashcroft (Dave) has the correct approach to this issue: work the problem from an engineering aspect not a brand name.
Mahn England
DEFENDER 110 D300 SE '23 (the S M E G)
Ex DEFENDER 110 wagon '08 (the Kelvinator)
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/members-rides/105691-one_iotas-110-inch-kelvinator.html
Ex 300Tdi Disco:
Did quite a few Transit to Borg Warner falcon/valiant conversions during my time at McNamara Differentials. They were quite strong when the carrier was drilled to accept 4 pinions,never saw a broken ring and pinion, but the halfshaft size was the limiting factor.
But no the Transit was not a D44. The difference in strength and quality is chalk and cheese.Whilst the Standard ratio of 4.625:1,combined with the 1.003:1 t/case ratio may give a final drive ratio that is 10% lower than a std Puma , I was suggesting that Rover fit them in production, along with the transit engine and gearbox, in which case alternative ratio ring and pinions could be made. The Std transit carrier offset will take a wide range of ratios without alteration.
Wagoo.
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