I already use superpro![]()
I already use superpro![]()
Our Land Rover does not leak oil! it just marks its territory.......
I have noticed that too, some brands of aftermarket trailing arms seem short. When comparing a pair of 110s each with 3" lift on flat ground, one had Equipe arms the other Gwyn Lewis, the Equipe equipped110 appeared to have a shorter wheelbase. Wouldn't have been by much but visually it was noticeable.
The Foundry 4x4 items when compared the std defender ones were exact same length.
careful fitting the wrong length trailing arms, the rear diff flange will no longer be in the same plane as the tc output flange, you could get out of phase vibrations & uj / spline wear
rather than using cranked arms you can get the same effect by using nolathane 48040 bushes, each half is angled about 15 deg and thus point your arms down toward the axle,( the center of its travel) . rather than horizontal, which is more like the upper limit of travel. that is probably why the std ones dont last. (apart from them being made by Britpart)
I haven seen a superpro so can't comment if they are the same
Before
After
they are going strong, after 4 months outback touring (towing van) they still look new
The same SP bushes on mine (chassis end, upper trailing arm) have now gone well past 200,000km and are still fine.
The OE ones were flogged out by 80,000km encouraging lots of rear/roll steer, but standard rubber ones are superior, so the www experts would have us believe![]()
I fitted SP's when I lived in NSW which was 6 years ago and they are as good today as the day I fitted them. Pat
APT fab cranked arms on their way - will provide update shortly...
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