Awesome info wayneg, I'm thinking of fitting a good second hand one, now I know what to look for!
Most appreciated.
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Awesome info wayneg, I'm thinking of fitting a good second hand one, now I know what to look for!
Most appreciated.
Apparently the problem is due to the distance between the pinion bearings being relatively short.
This means that, probably badly worded, they can't support the force transmitted along the pinion shaft as well.
The P38 centre is the same in P38 and Defender just the defender seems to report more issues than P38's. Either way, it's a better product, solves the issue, is reverse cut (as far as I'm aware) and has a locker.
Win, Win, Win.
[QUOTE=clubagreenie;2092004]The P38 centre is the same in P38 and Defender just the defender seems to report more issues than P38's. Either way, it's a better product, solves the issue, is reverse cut (as far as I'm aware) and has a locker.
Win, Win, Win.[/QUOTE
Am I missing something here? I have hands on experience of fitting an ARB locker into a P38a diff. The Pinion is retained, not even touched and the original crown wheel transferred to the locker. How can fitting a locker overcome any pinion bearing issue?
A quick look at the Ashcroft website shows similar fitment to ARB types
Ashcroft Transmissions
A complete rebuild (bearings) is about $400, you might get it done for less.
Any chance its just a loose nut on the flange?
Probably unlikely, but a quick job to check it before committing to rebuilding/replacing a diff.
Steve
SteveG, it's definitely inside the diff, the whole yoke moves, the uni joint is new, no movement of the uj at all.
I probably overstated the movement, had a close look yesterday, it is more like 1 - 2mm movement, I was only guessing at the 3 - 4mm I stated earlier.
It has no vibration at all under about 70 kmh, but as you get closer to 80 kmh and upwards it gets worse.
At the moment I'm only driving locally, I don't want to do any big trips until I have this sorted.