My 1949 P3 Rover had gaiterson the rear springs, when I memoved them to wash , inspect & grease them they were like new no sign of were or rust. The origional gaiters were made of leaver that had gone hard so my wife made me some out of black vinal.
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Thanks for the replies.
Any links to the strip and rebuild process.
Whitehillbilly
I was discussing this with a guy I know that has been in the 4WD suspension game from the early days.
He recommends after stripping and cleaning the leafs to use a zinc rich grey primer, then paint black and use a graphite grease during reassembly.
I followed this when i recently did mine apart from wrapping with tape my leaf spring refurb | Rover P5 Club Forum
Has anyone used Teflon spring pads (or better still, Teflon strips) on series springs? Would involve drilling a hole near the end of the leaves to locate the pads.
Have fun drilling the holes - the spring leaves are hard!
There is a US site called Expedition Landrovers, lots of interesting information, including using stick on teflon tape between the springs. Only thing is that it would add some thickness to the springs and might need some change to the U-bolts and will also need some changes to the shocks since the standard shocks rely on the friction between the springs to provide some shock absorption. This is the same if you put parabolics on, no interspring friction therefore different shock required. I looked at the tape a few years ago but it was very expensive so I ended up chamfering the ends of the leaves and diamond cutting them to make them work a little better.
Cheers,
TimJ.