It will not fit any other way.
Incidently my Porsche 911 calipers are in rougly the same area (front upper quadrant), I wonder what the advantages / disadvantages are?
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In the second pic is that the bolts that need to be counter sunk. The disc looks like it clears them bolts.
(NOT DISCOVERY REARS) this means we need to find out the right disc or what its off yeah ?
I thought they where in the rear position to. . .
I haven't heard back from the engineer yet ...
I have updated the marked up photo with a red circle around the bolts that needed to be countersunk should we use a 12mm caliper. This is so they would clear the hub. The caliper pictured is an 8mm so there was no need to countersink it.
Yep, we've got to find out what disc that is. :(
I've tried multiple Google's of the part numbers with quotes all over the place, but still no luck. I noticed that they have 6 holes instead of 5 like Rovers do.
I've contacted the last owner of the set to ask if he can contact or put me in contact with the person who made them in the UK.
Once we can identify the disc rotor, it would be a case of putting them on a big lathe, cutting a tight hole in the centre to fit the hub through, then drilling and tapping 6 holes.
While we all know that spacers are illegal in Australia. By removing the drum brakes you are narrowing the track by twice the thickness of the drum, so this needs to be restored. (By the 5mm spacer.)
I wonder if you could machine the drum part off the originals leaving only the centre (spacer) and use the original counter sunk screws to hold the now spacer onto the hub?
Hi
This is a setup i bought from a wrecker many years ago. It did come from a s3 wagon. I think the disk came from a early falcon like a XP or something like that. I can take it apart if anyone is interested.
Here is the valve I was talking about
https://www.aulro.com/afvb/images/im...010/06/323.jpg
If you like I can pull my rear brakes off the disco diff if it helps
Disco rear disk rotor part number is FTC1381 they are the same for defender and range rover
Adam
Fronts are FRC7329 which was also the rears on 110 till WA chassis numbers
Adam
Good point. :D Come to think of it, I think the spacer looked as though they had holes for the drum screws, they probably are made from old drums!
Oh, that would be awesome if you have the time. It would be great to compare and eventually come up with a sticky showing how to make your own set that have already had engineering approval.:cool: