Page 11 of 14 FirstFirst ... 910111213 ... LastLast
Results 101 to 110 of 131

Thread: Chinese Diff-locks (RD128)

  1. #101
    Join Date
    Nov 2008
    Location
    Illawarra
    Posts
    2,508
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Personal experience with "steel". There are many different grades and quality of those steels. We use the only aus manufacturer of steel rope (one steel) for our cranes, several years ago some bean counter switched to a foreign(china or India) made brand that they claimed had "exactly the same grade and make". The failure rate more than doubled, as did the down time repairing faster wearing ropes . They quickly switched back to Oz made rope.
    Now 2stroke it might be made of "steel" but if the chemistry is wrong( say to much carbon) it may as well be porcelein

  2. #102
    2stroke Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by frantic View Post
    Personal experience with "steel". There are many different grades and quality of those steels.
    Now 2stroke it might be made of "steel" but if the chemistry is wrong( say to much carbon) it may as well be porcelein
    The steel I was referring to was the planetary thrust washers. If anything the material the locker is made of is a bit soft, suits me fine as for the Suzuki it's more likely to be a shock load kill a diff than it actually wear out.
    As I said my faith in the China locker doesn't extend to putting one into the Defender. That's due to the unknown of their metallurgy only.

  3. #103
    Join Date
    Aug 2012
    Location
    North Loburn, New Zealand
    Posts
    862
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Just back from a week chasing Sika...so far I can report only good things. I have tried the locker a few times and it has worked flawlessly.

  4. #104
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    South Yundreup,WA.
    Posts
    7,468
    Total Downloaded
    0
    This will be interesting to see how it performs long term.
    I am on the fence a little with cheaper production items.
    Does anyone by woolworths brand foods, SCR car accessories etc?
    If I buy a winch for example for the amount of use it would get I think I would buy the cheaper version and just ensure it is maintained a lot like buying a Land Rover to begin with.
    Chinese / Thai / Korean manufacturing is getting much better, so may be an option.
    The question I have is are ARB lockers completely 100% Australian made, not assembled but made? I doubt it. My understanding is most of the casting is done OS, someone else may be able to confirm this.
    Have also seen many ARB lockers fail and as said they use fittings that are hard to replace off the shelf.
    What also annoys me is it is cheaper to buy an ARB locker in the US, so how does that work if they are made here. There is no excuse for this.
    Not against an ARB lockers and if I fit one would be would probably be an ARB or Ashcroft.
    2011 Discovery 4 TDV6
    2009 DRZ400E Suzuki
    1956 & 1961 P4 Rover (project)
    1976 SS Torana (project - all cash donations or parts accepted)
    2003 WK Holden Statesman
    Departed
    2000 Defender Extreme: Shrek (but only to son)
    84 RR (Gone) 97 Tdi Disco (Gone)
    98 Ducati 900SS Gone & Missed

    Facta Non Verba

  5. #105
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    newcastle
    Posts
    411
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by CraigE View Post
    .
    What also annoys me is it is cheaper to buy an ARB locker in the US, so how does that work if they are made here. There is no excuse for this.
    Not against an ARB lockers and if I fit one would be would probably be an ARB or Ashcroft.
    My understanding would be that Economics determines this. The American population dwarfs Australia so a reduced price opeing them up to a larger market would see them still make huge profits. I asked this Question to a Billabong head honcho and this was the reasoning he gave me for comparing what we pay for an Australian brand and what they pay. $60 as opposed to $25 for the same shirt.

    If this is right or not I don't know but that was the excuse I was given.

    Cheers.

  6. #106
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    South Yundreup,WA.
    Posts
    7,468
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by voltron View Post
    My understanding would be that Economics determines this. The American population dwarfs Australia so a reduced price opeing them up to a larger market would see them still make huge profits. I asked this Question to a Billabong head honcho and this was the reasoning he gave me for comparing what we pay for an Australian brand and what they pay. $60 as opposed to $25 for the same shirt.

    If this is right or not I don't know but that was the excuse I was given.

    Cheers.
    That comes down to were the product is made as well. Billabong has been made in China for years. Still no justification for $25 US and $60 in Australia. You can buy Billabong shorts in Thailand for around $10 genuine. I am wearing a pair atm and I have compared them to Billabong in surf shops here and they are identical. Having said that there are Thai imitations as well which while good ar not quite as bad.
    2011 Discovery 4 TDV6
    2009 DRZ400E Suzuki
    1956 & 1961 P4 Rover (project)
    1976 SS Torana (project - all cash donations or parts accepted)
    2003 WK Holden Statesman
    Departed
    2000 Defender Extreme: Shrek (but only to son)
    84 RR (Gone) 97 Tdi Disco (Gone)
    98 Ducati 900SS Gone & Missed

    Facta Non Verba

  7. #107
    n plus one Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Tikka7mm08 View Post
    Just back from a week chasing Sika...so far I can report only good things. I have tried the locker a few times and it has worked flawlessly.
    Thanks mate, keep us updated - we'll see how your cheapies fair against my mate's genuine locker - so far you're up one nil!

  8. #108
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    wollondilly
    Posts
    250
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Kevin B View Post
    hey all,

    seeing as we are talking about Lockers, just a thought also, if your only going to install one which would you do Front or rear??

    Sorry Tikka if this is a hijack let me know and ill edit it to a few Smileys

    Kevin
    Many years ago I started looking at lockers for the 110,I could only afford to do one end of the truck. I did the front due to the fact that the front is the one that seems to do most of the work when climbing, and when in ruts, it is easier to climb the front out with the looker in the front.

  9. #109
    Join Date
    Jul 2012
    Location
    midwest W.A
    Posts
    426
    Total Downloaded
    0
    [QUOTE=gromit;2106090]You also need to consider that the cheapo Chinese diff centre is in use every day you drive the vehicle.
    110Kph down the freeway with your kids onboard and relying on the unknown materials used in a diff centre that was made down to a price not to a specification ?
    Every time you take a corner those cast gears, possibly with incorrect backlash settings, are meshing & grinding away.....



    Unknown materials, made to a price not a spec, incorrect backlash-
    Sounds like you are describing a rover diff

  10. #110
    Tombie Guest
    If you have a vehicle with an LSD rear fit to the front, otherwise go rear.

    Rear axle has the highest traction loads when climbing.
    Only when the surface becomes so loose or slippery that traction is lacking (eg bog hole) does the front come into its own and pull you forward.

    Lower tyre pressure up front compared to rear also assists in these situations.

Page 11 of 14 FirstFirst ... 910111213 ... LastLast

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!