I was chatting to the guy's down at Les Richmond Auto, after purchasing the Hi-Tuff heavy duty rear axles and flanges, last week.
A good point was made that the grease won't last indefinitely, even encased in the collar. So if you do just replace and grease the adapter shaft, then you'll have to treat it as a service item, albeit a little further apart than the regular service intervals.
They've done a couple so far, on the older Puma's. One was very close to failing, Andrew showed me the photo's, and the other was done as a precaution, which still showed signs of fretting and corrosion.
They retro fit the Ashcroft kit;
Ashcroft Transmissions, but are currently out of stock. Having the spline running in an oil bath should fix the issue permanently.
As mine is a 2010, with 90,000k's, this is what I'll do to fix a problem that Landrover should've dealt with during the warranty period. No spline is designed to run without some form of lubrication. Probably the reason there hasn't been a recall from Landrover, is generally most Puma's are out of warranty when this issue rears it's ugly head.
Though having said that some of these failures are happening on the later Puma's as well.
The problem with this is you don't get a "hint" of a failure, it just goes bang and then no drive. It's not a matter of if it will happen, just when. well that's my opinion anyway. Did you get the dealer to take a picture of the new greased shaft Martin? Did they show you the old one?
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