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laughto
18th March 2020, 12:13 PM
I have found several drops of oil on the garage floor. There are 2 separate 'spills' with 2 drips each. Sorry I should have taken a photo prior to wiping up. The oil is kind of tacky and of non-descript colour. Is this likely to be Power Steering oil or transmission oil?

Tombie
18th March 2020, 01:25 PM
Could you provide some more “location” information.

Where does it appear to have released from under the vehicle?

Several plates underneath it would likely show signs of drilling from.

DazzaTD5
18th March 2020, 03:02 PM
[bigrolf][bigrolf][bigrolf]

"My Land Rover has an oil leak, where is it coming from?"

to answer this:
*it's coming from a mechanical part on the vehicle.
*The fluid is: engine oil, transmission fluid, brake fluid, coolant, water.

loanrangie
18th March 2020, 03:39 PM
You really need to remove the front bash plate to effectively trace a leak if its in the frontal area, lay some paper on the ground and you will have a leak map.

Tombie
18th March 2020, 04:09 PM
[bigrolf][bigrolf][bigrolf]

"My Land Rover has an oil leak, where is it coming from?"

to answer this:
*it's coming from a mechanical part on the vehicle.
*The fluid is: engine oil, transmission fluid, brake fluid, coolant, water.

I though you had a Mechanics Crystal Ball / 6th sense Dazza [emoji48]

Same with “its making a dink, doof, clunk sound”

scarry
18th March 2020, 04:15 PM
I would pull off all the bash plates,get torch,have a good look underneath,and all will be revealed.

Eric SDV6SE
18th March 2020, 04:45 PM
Its not leaking oil , its sweating horsepower.

rick130
18th March 2020, 04:48 PM
At least it's not empty...

gavinwibrow
18th March 2020, 06:00 PM
I though you had a Mechanics Crystal Ball / 6th dense Dazza [emoji48]

Same with “its making a dink, doof, clunk sound”



Now THAT is a Freudian spelling slip - and no, Dazza is not dense[bigsmile1]

laughto
20th March 2020, 06:09 AM
Where does it appear to have released from under the vehicle?

Looks like around the Lower Control Arm coupling area on LHS. No real dripping occurring.

Eric SDV6SE
20th March 2020, 09:47 AM
Your lower control arm hydrobushes have failed, time to replace. Others have found its faster and easier to replace the complete arm assembly, others have done it with tooling to press out the old bushes and fit new. The Mehle aftermatket bushes are popular as a replacement. You can get new arms with bushes pre fitted from the uk suppliers quite readily, but with todays exchange rate, perhaps a bit dearer.

You will need a wheel alignment after replacing bushes or arms.

laughto
20th March 2020, 10:46 AM
Your lower control arm hydrobushes have failed, time to replace. Others have found its faster and easier to replace the complete arm assembly, others have done it with tooling to press out the old bushes and fit new. The Mehle aftermatket bushes are popular as a replacement. You can get new arms with bushes pre fitted from the uk suppliers quite readily, but with todays exchange rate, perhaps a bit dearer.

You will need a wheel alignment after replacing bushes or arms.

Umm, how long should these last? They were replaced 50K ago!

DieselLSE
20th March 2020, 11:18 AM
Umm, how long should these last? They were replaced 50K ago!
Depends. They are a sacrificial item designed to give a compliant ride over virtually any terrain. Assuming you replaced the whole arm last time and don't do heaps of off-roading or drive too fast over rough surfaces, then I would expect them to last about double that. But if you just replaced the hydra bushes, or used non genuine, then that could explain it.
Pretty easy to check. Just jack up the front wheel (no need to remove it), put a jack stand or similar under the chassis for safety, then using a long pry bar or large screwdriver or tyre lever or similar, see if you can get any movement between the bush housing and the chassis. It should be slight and smooth movement of a few mm. Any clunking or unrestricted movement means that the bush is worn and the fluid has escaped. Both sides must be replaced together and, as mentioned, a wheel alignment done.

scarry
20th March 2020, 07:32 PM
Umm, how long should these last? They were replaced 50K ago!

A mate of mine has them clunking at 30K,D4,never been off road.

My vehicle has had an off road hiding,and at 85K started to knock only over large bumps,and corrugations.

So they seem to die at all sorts of K's.

DiscoJeffster
20th March 2020, 09:10 PM
Before my ownership, original done at 160,000km. The replacements are now at 115,000km. I’m getting shimmying on braking and vibration but I suspect brakes and wheel balance not bushes. I’ve pushed and pulled at them and they seems ok. No fluid leaking.
They’ve also done some harsh roads such as Ningaloo Station which if you’re in the west and tried that it’s an hour of corrugation hell. Done that a number of times and the rest. I’ve been expecting to need to sort them ......

So in summary, they can somehow do long mileage and, we’ll, not

DazzaTD5
24th March 2020, 11:42 AM
*As others have suggested remove the bash plate and have a look.
*Area near passenger side lower control arm maybe the front diff leaking, not that un-common.
*The 3.0lt engine also seems to leak a bit more than older 2.7lt from round the sump area.

DazzaTD5
24th March 2020, 11:44 AM
Lower Control Arms;

*i've changed them as little as 70K and as high as round 300K.
*There doesnt seem to be any rhyme or reason behind their failures.
*BUT my own thoughts are, city use only vehicles they seem to fail earlier.

Tombie
24th March 2020, 11:51 AM
Lower Control Arms;

*i've changed them as little as 70K and as high as round 300K.
*There doesnt seem to be any rhyme or reason behind their failures.
*BUT my own thoughts are, city use only vehicles they seem to fail earlier.

I’ve seen earlier failures on people’s vehicles where they do the following sequence - Park, Lower...Everything remains under tension.

Best to start the lowering function whilst rolling and the wheels etc then have less tension in situ.

I had a great run until I went hell for leather on a track for 3 days at high pace - making that suspension work hard was enough to require replacement bushes upon completion.