As an addition to the above. When you change gear in a Puma, or any 110/90 for that matter, as well as using the clutch and the gearstick a lot of other components come into play. Don't forget that there are two fairly long propshafts beneath you. At the end of these you have the couplings, four in total. Changing gear in the 90/110/Defender is getting all of this gear plus your normal clutch/gearstick to work in unison. Usually anyone coming from a "normal" car to this setup comes off the clutch very quickly which results in all of the above components jerking together. That is why I NEVER let anyone drive any of mine. I think it is just a matter of getting acclimatised to the setup and coming off the clutch a little easier than in a "normal" car. Too slow and you will get problems too.
I am not trying to teach any of the initiated on this forum in how to drive but these are just my thoughts on why I don't get any clunks. There is scope for wear in these myriad of components and that will contribute some slack to the system making it hard to get a clean smooth change. Any dealer that tells you that clunks are normal to the 90/110/Defender has never owned and driven one.


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