Hi Chris. I would start by ruling out stale fuel by running a tank or 2 of fresh fuel through it. Then go to timing/spark plugs etc???
Cheers
Chris
Hi All,
Recently got a series 3 LWB back on the road, 74 vintage with the 2.25 petrol and an OD unit.
Took it for a run today to blow the cobwebs out and comfortably maintained around 85km/hr. When it was bought and driven from brisbane back to the Sunshine Coast it was coasting along at around 100km/hr, that was 5 years ago and it has been sitting since. Question is would a tune up help (it idles fine) or would there be something else going on/I can do, to get that top speed back?
Cheers, Chris
Hi Chris. I would start by ruling out stale fuel by running a tank or 2 of fresh fuel through it. Then go to timing/spark plugs etc???
Cheers
Chris
If the motor hasn't been touched for five years then all that should be as it was, so after you put fresh juice in it make sure it's breathing ok. The air cleaner could be restricting air flow or a rat might have nested up the exhaust pipe.
More than likely stale juice though.
After that you have spark plugs, plug leads, carby, points, timing, tappet clearance, etc. to give a good going over.
Good Luck.
Cheers, Mick.
1974 S3 88 Holden 186.
1971 S2A 88
1971 S2A 109 6 cyl. tray back.
1964 S2A 88 "Starfire Four" engine!
1972 S3 88 x 2
1959 S2 88 ARN 111-014
1959 S2 88 ARN 111-556
1988 Perentie 110 FFR ARN 48-728 steering now KLR PAS!
REMLR 88
1969 BSA Bantam B175
Also check for dragging brakes and soft tyres.
Other checks - throttle opening, badly incorrect toe in, flooding carburettor, manifold leaks, including dislodged pollution equipment, gummed up PCV. split PCV diaphragm.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
Don't forget VERY significant effect of headwind or tailwind. A slight headwind can take the top off your speed, and a slight tailwind can enhance it significantly. At these speeds there is not much reserve power available, so a slight change in the total aerodynamic drag can make a big difference to your top speed. If you are testing on flat ground, doing runs in both directions is important.
The Land Rover's drag coefficient is around 0.9 (compared with 0.3 or thereabouts for a modern vehicle).
Cheers
C00P
(ours is a '76 LWB with Global Roamer O/D)
Theres a reason why Some landie drivers use the saying "aerodynamics don't count in low range."
I've seen sheds with better drag co-effecients than shed class landies (better quarter mile drag times too probably)
Dave
"In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."
For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.
Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute
TdiautoManual d1 (gave it to the Mupion)
Archaeoptersix 1990 6x6 dual cab(This things staying)
If you've benefited from one or more of my posts please remember, your taxes paid for my skill sets, I'm just trying to make sure you get your monies worth.
If you think you're in front on the deal, pay it forwards.
Thanks for the replies everyone. A long list of elimination ahead it would seem.
New fuel hasn't helped and I have just noticed a leak where the exhaust joins the bottom of the manifold - could this be the problem for not achieving previous speed? Those 3 bolts are a bugger to get at..
Cheers
Chris
My apologies. The figure without roof rack was 0.678 (ie, around 0.7 as you suggested). It rose to 0.917 when a long roof rack was added (which is a pretty typical configuration). There was an 8% reduction in the CD when a tyre was placed on the bonnet (no roof rack condition), and the CD went up to 0.972 when there was gear placed on the roof rack (ie, getting close to the figure for a flat plate of the same cross-sectional area- 1.28).
The model used was a LWB Defender, but I suspect a SIII would be little different (and possibly worse).
To get the full story, see here:
https://www.google.com.au/url'sa=t&r...,d.dGo&cad=rja
If that link fails, google "The Effect of Vehicle-Roof Rack Configurations on the Aerodynamic Drag Coefficient CJ BURGER"
Hope you find it interesting,
Cheers
C00P
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