i asked the same thing at work,, an they are harmonic balencers for the chassie, there are 2 of them,, one each side, to help get vibrations out of the chassie an help keep it qwiet,,
I was crawling under the back to see where I could run some cables and noticed what appear to be large swinging cast weights up inside the ends of the bumper. I'm intrigued as to what these are for - maybe vibration dampers or something to do auto leveling?
i asked the same thing at work,, an they are harmonic balencers for the chassie, there are 2 of them,, one each side, to help get vibrations out of the chassie an help keep it qwiet,,
I thought only the Freebie and Freebie 2 were monocoque?
06 SE V6 Discovery 3
D3 has a monocoque type of body shell mounted on what you could call a chassis.
When you say "could call a chassis" are you suggesting it has a subframe connecting the front end, engine and gearbox to the monocoque but not the rear suspension. Or it has a true chassis that mount all the running gear (engine, transmission, diffs and suspension) and the monocoque body sits on top?
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
yer the LR2 an LM are the only land rovers with a true monocoque, the sport an d3 have both, they run the same floor plan, hence why they are soooooo heavy, its cos of some production resions they have "2 chassis"
I haven't been under one for about a year, so I am a bit hazy on the mounting systems.
As far as I recall, the mechanical components are all mounted off the chassis and the body mounts on top.
I know the rear driveshafts pass through the chassis rails for clearance reasons.
The Range Rover Sport and the Discovery 3 are very similar in underbody design, but the Sport is on a shorter wheelbase.
Someone on the D3 design team posted on D3 UK
3 or so years back that the intention was for weights in
all 4 corners, but costs had to be contained.
The money saved was then spent on the ingenious tow
bar design .... and the underslung exhaust
The body mounts onto the chassis and the drivetrain etc is all attached to the chassis.
In the UK (I don't know about here) to do things like replace turbos, they will undo the 12(?) mounting bolts, disconnect the necessary cables etc and then hoist the body off the chassis. Understand it doesn't take much time to do this.
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