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Thread: Mods/Standard

  1. #11
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    Ah well once you have done all the work ill buy it off you ...

    Are you going to bobtail the rear? move the tank forward and get rid of all the rear over hang? or will that make it too hard to engineer?

    ...looks like a great idea! get that old look with comfort.

  2. #12
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    Yep chassis will be cut just past the wheels with a simple tray and bar work. I've got a 90 litre aluminium tank that fits between the tray and chassis behind the cab. Was toying with the idea of a three cylinder gas manifold like in the back of disco's but you can't take extra gas to steep point. Next thing on my shopping list is the 302 winsor and a c4. But don't tell SWMBO.

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post

    Just a little on that, you can't fit a regular "late 2a gearbox" pushing a 1 ton gearbox. The mainshaft is too short.

    A 1 ton gearbox is designed for 9.00 X 16 tyres (36") if you use it on standard tyres you will be flat out at 80KPH untill the engine blows up from over-revving. There is no Fairey, Toro or Rocky-Mountain Overdrive manufactured to suit the 1 ton transfer box. I know I have them.

    Diana
    funny, the ones I pulled out of the tray back 1 ton series III's fit just fine,as did the tcase that was in fozzy (which is a 1.16 aggregate) I know the FC ones are different and if youve got them then hand one over I want it in fozzy, speeds overrated, low speed crawl and pull is what counts



    Quote Originally Posted by Grover-98 View Post
    Ok so you are saying the Series III is best avoided?

    You mentioned only a little on the series II i am sure it has its faults as well? So you believe my best option is to look for a late Series II?

    nope series IIIs are great but the II's are more "agricultural" which is what a lot of guys want and like about them.

    at the end of the day the key features that make them landies aren't that far apart.
    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
    Tdi autoManual 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.

  4. #14
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    I love the idea of a hybrid!

    I have a 84 Range Rover sitting in the paddock and i am sure i could pick up a nice 2A Body. mix them all together might be a goer one day when i can afford it

  5. #15
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    And turn it in to something like one of these two



    TIM.

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Blknight.aus View Post
    funny, the ones I pulled out of the tray back 1 ton series III's fit just fine,as did the tcase that was in fozzy (which is a 1.16 aggregate) I know the FC ones are different and if youve got them then hand one over I want it in fozzy, speeds overrated, low speed crawl and pull is what counts.
    Then it wasn't a 1 ton box, as the 1 ton boxes are the same as the Series IIB Forward control boxes. It would also be highly unlikely that you drove a SIII 1 Ton in Australia as they were not imported to Oz. The only one that is known to be here is a private import in 1974 which is currently lost.

    You can tell the 1 ton and forward control boxes as they have 3 gears on the intermediate gear cluster and are all helical cut. The mainshaft constant gear runs on the middle of the three intermediate gears (same as LT230) and hence the extra length in the mainshaft. The PTO cover plate/mainshaft bearing holder is slightly convex in the helical box where the regular box has a concave in it.

    The Series transfer ratio up to suffix A was 1.148:1 in high range and 2.888:1 in low while the later suffix C t/f were 2.35:1 in low. It you want crawler gears use a 12D prefix LT230 with 1.667:1 in high range. (All the LT230s have the same low transfer which is actually lower than the helical series box.)

    No you can't have one of my FC boxes. I have 3 vehicles that require them as standard specification.

    Diana

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  7. #17
    Rangier Rover Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by long stroke View Post
    And turn it in to something like one of these two



    TIM.
    That series 1 looks I have 2 here so may keep one original and the other on a shortened Rangie chassis.

  8. #18
    Rangier Rover Guest
    Of all the series Rovers I have here the 1969 11A has been the pick of them by far. Nothing much to go wrong in it as so simple. Never had any grief with the gear box. My series 3s have all had gearbox problems as a result of Land Rover trying to put synchromesh in a already over stressed gear box. We have worked out if the Series box is not driven with anger in 1st, 3rd and reverse they have now proven to very durable here.
    As pointed out before the dash in a series 3 is fragile.


    Tony

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    The all synchromesh gearbox is sort of nice to drive but has a quite high reverse gear so when you try to reverse out of the gully that you got trapped in, it's like starting off in second gear. So you give it a little bit of revs to get moving and the reverse idler gear shaft pops out the side of the casing.

    SIII (all synchro) boxes have a LOWER ratio reverse gear, not higher.

    Land Rover gear ratios

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by isuzurover View Post
    SIII (all synchro) boxes have a LOWER ratio reverse gear, not higher.
    Thanks Ben

    I had always asumed that the reason the SIII box threw it's reverse idler out the side of the case was because of the ratio. Now I know it was because of the inadequate case. Good thing that my SIII has the lattice work on it's case.

    Serves me right for not checking the information other people (assumed reliable sources) tell me. That is a bad personality flaw, there are some people who will say stuff and I'll run to the books and check out the facts on the issue. Then there are others whom I simply believe, now I'll be checking up on everyone.

    Diana

    P.S. Ben - do you have a secondary source where I can check up on what you said?

    P.P.S. Ben - I didn't realise that the LT95/LT85/LT77 didn't have reverse gear?

    Also: the data sheet can not be correct, it mentions that the SIIA & SIII 1 ton all had the same ratio (? part synchro box) - this is not true as the SIII had the synchro box as did the last of the SIIB built in SA up till 1976.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

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