Use a piece of wire or a cable tie to probe the small plug hole to check it isn't blocked.
It is easier to refill the oil with the steering turned to full lock, but it isn't essential.
Hi, I am currently trying to change the oil in my swivel hubs. (I have done a search on this). I undid all 3 bolts and a small amount of dark oil came out of the drain plug. I then filled it up through the fill plug (the larger one on top). I thought I was supposed to keep filling until oil started to come out of the middle plug (the smallest one). Nothing came out of the middle one and eventually oil started to come out of the top plug. I am guessing this means it is overfull now? Should I just drain it again and fill using the middle plug as a filling point? Is there anything else I have overlooked? Is it ok to do with the steering almost straight ahead?
Thanks
Use a piece of wire or a cable tie to probe the small plug hole to check it isn't blocked.
It is easier to refill the oil with the steering turned to full lock, but it isn't essential.
The level plug is tiny. You would be there all day trying to fill it. Why not fill it with one shot grease like I have done, as long as it doesn't leak out the seals too much.
Why do they even have a separate fill plug? Is it ok to just use the level
plug to fill it as well (the same as diffs, gearboxes, etc)?
Come to think of it, if it was empty you are probably going to find most of the oil on the ground in the next few weeks.
Regards Philip A
I wouldn't recommend that grease - I stripped a few old swivels and found the CVs were rusted out. Water had mixed with the grease and wrecked them. You can't drain grease to get water out as you can with oil, so it had been in there for a long time.
My guess is that you already have grease in there, and it's blocking the level plug. As said, a bit of wire should clear it. And don't do what I did - I had the metal end of an oil pump stuck in the filler hole with the steering at full lock, and then I straightened the steering, and the end of the pump sheared off and fell in. So I rebuilt both swivels, which turned out to be a very good result since there were a heap of other problems anyway!
At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.
If you want to change the grease, I recall someone posted a long time ago that all you do is add some ATF and drive around the block.
Every now and then I drop out the drain plug, and any water should show then.
I also use a zip tie to test the level, by turning onto lock and dipping through the filler. You also see the colour from this, light brown good caramel bad.
Land cruisers and patrols have used grease since time immemorial and any old RRC will have enough damage to the balls that really new balls will be needed to stop leaks.
Regards Philip A
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