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Thread: Railko bushing, seating

  1. #11
    ashhhhh Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    Have you thought about converting to tapered roller bearings the same as early 1948 models and all Range Rover Classic and Discovery 1 and 2?
    I didn't know it was possible, i thought i was doing the right thing going to Railko instead of cones..

  2. #12
    ashhhhh Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by rover-56 View Post
    "Does the last image look OK? The bush sits maybe .5mm above flush."

    I think that 0.5mm one would be close enough to try assembly, but I would be asking the supplier for another one to match. If you can get the two castings together and don't need an excessive number of shims I think it would be ok.

    Terry
    Excellent. I've got a replacement on the way, the same as the "best" one.

  3. #13
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by ashhhhh View Post
    I didn't know it was possible, i thought i was doing the right thing going to Railko instead of cones..
    Converting can be done but you would need to fit a good steering damper. The Railko does a good job of calming the steering kick on a Series.
    Terry
    80 109" 2.6 P ex Army GS, saved from the scrappie.
    95 300tdi 130 Single cab tray.
    2010 Guzzi 750

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by ashhhhh View Post
    I didn't know it was possible, i thought i was doing the right thing going to Railko instead of cones..
    Railko are better than cones, but some people are going to tapered rollers. The reason was that in the 1940s there was a lot of corrugated roads that would hammer and brinnel the tapered rollers, cones were a slight improvement but Railko a vast improvement.

    Now that our vehicles don't do the amount of corrugated roads they used to tapered roller bearings are an option. The steering is lighter and they are easier to lubricate. Basically you use the same bearing that is on the bottom and machine down the Railko pin to 19mm and the correct shoulder (can't remember the length). Brian Danielson LVS sells the pins already machined, but they are a rough and ready job, if you have a lathe and a bit of time its an easy job. As Terry says, there is a bit of kick, so you need a steering damper, something that was fitted to most Land Rovers from late SIIa.

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

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