Yes they are not maintenance free
There was a thread in the projects section about reconditioning the Disco jack.
Got to the tain station last night on my way home from work. The car has a distinct lean and on inspection I have a flat tyre.
Bugger I'm supposed to pick the kids up from school tonight - this better not take long... guess the suit is getting dirty then.
So I lift the back seat and get the tools out, pop the bonnet pull the jack out, carefully place it under the car and start pumping
Pump
nothing
Pump
nothing
Pump
still nothing.... Double bugger.
Left the car stranded at the station and jumped in a cab to get the kids so that was all good.
So before you get stranded like I did check your bottle jack to make sure it still has oil.
Yes they are not maintenance free
There was a thread in the projects section about reconditioning the Disco jack.
Please please buy yourself an electric compressor, most flats can be pumped up enough to get yourself somewhere where there's help, like home.
This is a good reason why a mechanical jack like a high-lift or scissor jack is better to carry!
With my Landrover?
Regularly.
Very annoying.
I recently got the jack out of my D2a to change a damaged tire. Same thing. No oil!
I know it has never been used either.![]()
97 D1 V8 SE manual - loud & locked - RPI Optimax & some toys
09 D3 HSE
Sold and missed: 03 D2a V8 auto
LROCV member
I love it when a plan comes together!
John "Hannibal" Smith
I have at least 3 compressors, I just didn't have them or the air lines with me.
I pumped the tyre up to 40 psi (33's so there is plenty of air in there) and drove it home to which takes about 5 - 8 min. When I got home the tyre was well on the way to being flat again. It appears the valve is shot. Wiggle it, just a little bit, and air comes streaming out. Push it in hard against the rim and that tell tale hisssss stops.
Here is the rebuild instruction.
Australian Land Rover Owners
I sympathise. The flat tyre will happen only on the day you left the hose/comp in the shed because you were tidying up. Murphy's law prevails.
I never used it, thanks to the air compressor. But it is tested ok.
Just a question: What kind of oil is necessary to refill it if the case?
Brake fluid type, or hidraulic fluid like steering?
Thanks in advance
Hydraulic jack oil, available most tool places. In an emergency you could steal some engine oil from somewhere, or ATF. However it may not do the seals any good. I have a leaky old jack which I top up with ATF when I need it, because I don't have to pay top dollar for it.
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