They should have used a larger diameter bolt instead of a miserable little 6mm one on such an important part to give it a better chance of staying tight.
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They should have used a larger diameter bolt instead of a miserable little 6mm one on such an important part to give it a better chance of staying tight.
Lots-a-landies is on the money, LH thread will cure it imediately. They do it with the wheel nuts on the LH side of the Dyna and Coaster buses, and the Viscous fan on the Tdi and early V8.
Even the Honda engines like our 1992 Accord, they rotate anticlockwise and the crankbolt is a LH thread. Good simple engineering design that.
JC
They do when they get loose.
If you've ever seen a vehicle lose a wheel because the nuts were loose, it's always the left side.
On the right you can lose individual nuts, but never enough to loose the whole wheel.
Once saw a truck that'd lost both left hand dual wheels. Spaced about 100m apart on the road.:D
If the nuts stay tight enough that the wheel can't move on the hub, then it doesn't matter which way the threads turn.
The thing is there was no official tech bulletin or recall. It was not done voluntarily by most LR dealers and if it was suggested had an additional cost. There were even some dealers that did not know about it initially.
Though by now Daves service department should have been more than aware of it and made him aware.
It is a shame because all the info is right here.
I'm curious to know if there is any pattern re model years? (the subject of this thread is a 2000 model). Interesting comments on this thread that any LR specialist will have sorted it by now - a rather well known Sydney LR specialist reckons it's a completely over-rated problem and they've only seen it happen a couple of times despite servicing many hundreds of Td5s over past 10 years. However, for the sake of a relatively small amount of time/$ it's probably worth getting done regardless...