Completely unnecessary and you can only use the long axle in the MacNamara bolt operated diff lock, as the short axle has lengthened splines to operate the diff lock.
The only damage I have personally seen to these axles was caused by my brother. 2A LWB ex army with a 253 V8, standard gearbox and transfer case, MacNamara hypoid rear diff with 4.7:1 ratios and 36" Silverstone MT117 tires. The vehicle fell backwards off a 1 meter rock ledge on full noise in low 1st. This managed to break the locking axle between the side gear in the diff and the cross shaft, and twist the outer spline on both axles. I don't think it would be possible to generate those sort of loads with a 2.25 petrol and standardish sized tires.
Last edited by cmurray; 20th March 2007 at 09:24 AM.
Sorry to have to disagree with you - the 2a parts book lists the ENV axle as optional (not just on One Tons) , but the Salisbury as standard on 109s from suffix H onwards. (not that I have ever seen a 2a with an original Salisbury, although the conversion is fairly common)
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
Dante,
The Mcnamara manual diff lock is the way to go if you are on a budget (who is'nt?) and are happy to jump out and lock/unlock the thing all the time between 4wd sections. I got a bit lazy once and did'nt bother and the SWB headed bush as the steering can get innefectual at speed.- see photo.
I agree with Craig Murray that it would only be with extra power that you would need to upgrade other components before looking at axles, its actually the crownwheel and diff centre/housing that is the next weakest item. I am speaking from experience as I stripped both a crownwheel and cracked a centre housing, ( different trips) but I was running a 186 pepped up a bit.
I also had to accept that they came from an old farm hack series vehicle. so it was a bit much to ask.
I forgot to add, it used to wear out drive flanges. In fact all three Salisburys have worn them. On the 2A wagon they were welded to the axles and I didn't notice for quite a while, even when the weld cracked and it was only driving on the jagged crack line of weld.
I have thought of replacing the flanges on my Defender as I tow a lot and was told by Jack MacNamara they wear out if you do but I am only on my second set of flanges in 130 000 km.
Jeff
Hi Guys,
Depends what military 2a it was. If it was a GS it would have either had the Rover or NVA diff. If it was a 2a workshop vehicle, it would have been retrofitted with a Salisbury diff (as they all were).
Maxidrive do a maxidrive for the Salisbury more $$ but better than the McNamara, have one fitted in a 2a workshop, which gives you uprated axles and flanges, so no more wearing out of drive flanges.
Tony
[QUOTE=tony;512881]Hi Guys,
Depends what military 2a it was. If it was a GS it would have either had the Rover or NVA diff. If it was a 2a workshop vehicle, it would have been retrofitted with a Salisbury diff (as they all were).
I don't think they all were. I know of one that I used to see in the late years of it's military career and I know the person who bought it when it was demobbed and it was always a Rover type diff.
Yes, I've just never seen or at least noticed one. According to the parts book all the Salisbury axles were fitted with metric wheel studs. Also, according to the parts book, as far as I can work out, the all synchromesh gearbox was only fitted to home market station wagons from suffix H - but I have a feeling that although most other 2as were assembled here, station wagons were always fully imported, and may well have been home market ones.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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