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Thread: Boge Load Leveller On Early Classics

  1. #1
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    Boge Load Leveller On Early Classics

    Owning a '75 means dealing with the Boge Load Leveller.

    There are two types, one fitted to the 2 door and the other fitted to the 4 door. The 4 door has 25mm longer travel and can be retrofitted to the two door. Not advisable to go the other way.
    Load leveller not intended for vehicles fitted with lift kits.

    When they stop working.
    A lot of owners, as soon as they ceased to work, sought the cheap solution, changing the rear shocks and springs for heavy duty items.
    Works fine and there are advantages, though you lose the marshmallow ride.
    Chances are the shocks and springs have been changed by now anyway.

    If the unit is out of the vehicle and the shaft can be compressed by hand, or showing signs of leaking oil it is knackered.
    I was advised that the shaft requires a considerable force to compress, (up to a tonne) provided it is working properly.
    With the unit in the car, testing is as per the owners manual. Load the back up and proceed for a few ks, the rear suspension should level out.

    Having the unit reconditioned is fortunately possible.
    W.W. Shock Absorbers - Brisbane's original shock absorber reconditioners. 33 Matheson Street, Virginia, Queensland, Australia 4014
    WW in Brisbane, very efficient and prompt service.
    Bottom line $400, plus postage.
    This is for the unit only, with no fittings.

    The ball joints are available, the lower boot and the clips are available as OEM or aftermarket. The upper boot is not available, so take care of that. The clamp for the top boot is a Jubilee Clip.
    About $100 will see you straight for the other parts from most overseas suppliers. Locally seems to draw a blank; very few requests.

    Hope this info helps owners restoring or keeping one original.

    Cheers,
    Richard
    Last edited by jackafrica; 24th December 2013 at 11:15 AM. Reason: further information

  2. #2
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    Thanks, good info. To add, I drilled and tapped for grease nipples, the top and bottom housing for the ball joints. Hopefully this will extend the working life of my "yet to be fitted" Load Leveller.

    Jack, do you have the travel lengths for both the 2 door and 4 door LL units?

    cheers
    Serg

  3. #3
    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    Looks like you've been doing your homework! Where did you see that there are two types? I've only got NRC4163 listed in my book. I took a leveller off a 2-door and put it on my 4-door with no problems.

    I suppose I should write up that fitting tutorial I've been meaning to do with all the photos I took . . . ages ago.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

  4. #4
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    The bloke at WW Shockabsorbers said there were two lengths, the 4 door being 25mm longer.
    I've taken him at his word, given I only have a 2 door example.

    In my rubbish Brooklands reprint of the '85 Spare Parts cattle dog, there shows only the one one example, as you've quoted.
    My genuine 1978 cattle dog shows a different part number ( 90575877 ) the 4 door release being another 4 years down the track.

    Perhaps at one time, there were different lengths of travel, then superceded to the later part and part number for replacement purposes.
    Maybe it is a furphy, certainly at this stage, the different lengths are unsubstantiated.

    Davo, please post your fitting tutorial to add to the thread. Great idea.

  5. #5
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    Personally I think removing them is the best idea.

    IMHO when the unit is presurised it turns the vehicle into a tricycle with all the instability that entails, particularly with pre-antiroll bar equipped models.

    Diana

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

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    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    Personally I think removing them is the best idea.

    IMHO when the unit is presurised it turns the vehicle into a tricycle with all the instability that entails, particularly with pre-antiroll bar equipped models.

    Diana
    I can never work out why people write things like this. The guys who designed the vehicle were particularly good engineers and knew what they were doing. The leveller was an excellent way to have both a soft suspension and load-carrying. The design has been well-proven for over forty years. And I haven't found any tricycle-like characteristics on my car.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

  7. #7
    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by jackafrica View Post
    The bloke at WW Shockabsorbers said there were two lengths, the 4 door being 25mm longer.
    I've taken him at his word, given I only have a 2 door example.

    In my rubbish Brooklands reprint of the '85 Spare Parts cattle dog, there shows only the one one example, as you've quoted.
    My genuine 1978 cattle dog shows a different part number ( 90575877 ) the 4 door release being another 4 years down the track.

    Perhaps at one time, there were different lengths of travel, then superceded to the later part and part number for replacement purposes.
    Maybe it is a furphy, certainly at this stage, the different lengths are unsubstantiated.

    Davo, please post your fitting tutorial to add to the thread. Great idea.
    Yes, I really should get onto that. Feel free to nag.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    Personally I think removing them is the best idea.

    IMHO when the unit is presurised it turns the vehicle into a tricycle with all the instability that entails, particularly with pre-antiroll bar equipped models.

    Diana
    The tricycle flop only happens when you have mismatched springs and weight carried on diagonal corners. This is easily fixed.

    Jack the vehicle up central front and see if the rear sits evenly. If it doesn't you need to swap or pack springs until it either sits level or has the 5-10mm standard lean to the drivers side (owner preference).
    Repeat for the other end.

    Get it sitting level like this and it'll behave itself perfectly on road. Get mis-matched springs which force diagonal load carrying and it'll flop in corners.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dougal View Post
    The tricycle flop only happens when you have mismatched springs and weight carried on diagonal corners. This is easily fixed.

    Jack the vehicle up central front and see if the rear sits evenly. If it doesn't you need to swap or pack springs until it either sits level or has the 5-10mm standard lean to the drivers side (owner preference).
    Repeat for the other end.

    Get it sitting level like this and it'll behave itself perfectly on road. Get mis-matched springs which force diagonal load carrying and it'll flop in corners.
    You miss my point. The Boge unit is an active system which pressurises whilst the vehicle is in motion.

    The springs support the vehicle almost above the wheels making a stable 4-point platform.

    In motion when the vehicle is tail heavy, with the mass supported by the springs, the Boge unit pressurises to push up the body making the ride level. This removes pressure, and therefore stability, off the springs and transfers the rear mass to the "A" frame making the rear into a see-saw (three point platform) and therefore unstable.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  10. #10
    Davo is offline ChatterBox Silver Subscriber
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    You miss my point. The Boge unit is an active system which pressurises whilst the vehicle is in motion.

    The springs support the vehicle almost above the wheels making a stable 4-point platform.

    In motion when the vehicle is tail heavy, with the mass supported by the springs, the Boge unit pressurises to push up the body making the ride level. This removes pressure, and therefore stability, off the springs and transfers the rear mass to the "A" frame making the rear into a see-saw (three point platform) and therefore unstable.
    Sigh. I need my lunch. I'll leave you to re-engineer the vehicle.
    At any given point in time, somewhere in the world someone is working on a Land-Rover.

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