Found an interesting post regarding this matter;
"By way of historical explanation I should say that in the 1970's I worked for a UK company, Davies and Metcalfe. I worked on the required brake modifications on the locally built (NSW) British Rail designed High Speed trains, known here as the XPT. Incidentally the eight six car sets built here have now done well over a million kilometres each and that equates to over 25 times (each) around the earth!
Wabco (Westinghouse Brake Company) were D&M's chief competitors for train braking systems so I admit that I have a natural competitive prejudice.
Were I to design (redesign that is) this vacuum pump the piston would have a coiled oil ring and the piston return spring would only be equal to the designed vacuum, so that once that vacuum was achieved in the brake booster the piston would be "held" in the end of the cylinder and the pressure pad would only return to the camshaft lobe once that vacuum was lost. The pop rivets technically are fine, after all, most aircraft external panels are riveted and it's an acceptable method of fixing two components together."
300TDi Vacuum Pump - Discovery Forum - LR4x4 - The Land Rover Forum
Tom.
1996 Disco 1 300TDI manual - Lucille a cantankerous red head! :D
1997 Disco 1 300TDI Auto - sold
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