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Thread: 33's or 35's on V8 county

  1. #1
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    33's or 35's on V8 county

    hi guys I can't decide which tyres to go with so if any one has some experiance with this can you please post, with 35's I am worried the little old motor will be working to hard and use far to much fuel, but I would like the diff clearance as the bloody sals gets hooked up, so I would like to know how the gearing is in low range and how much more fuel it will burn. cheers.

  2. #2
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    Have you got LT 85 or 95 ??

    The 33's will be fine, but 35's will make the gearing too high with a 3.5 carby engine into a headwind or uphill
    Offroad, 33's are fine in low, but 35's are getting a bit too high geared I reckon without 4.11:1 gears in the diffs.(Now THERES an idea).
    JC
    The Isuzu 110. Solid and as dependable as a rock, coming soon with auto box😊
    The Range Rover L322 4.4.TTDV8 ....probably won't bother with the remap..😈

  3. #3
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    We have just put 33"s on our county they are fine didn't even notice a difference in gearing
    But yes the sals is still a plow
    I reckon 35''s would be great but you would have to look at diff gears for shore

    CHEERS TIM.

  4. #4
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    JC it is the LT85

    Longstrock thanks, would love 4.11 but $$$ at the moment I have spent alot on the car laterly and the wife is starting to ask questions.

  5. #5
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    There is a cheaper alternative to having 4.11's with 35" tyres but doesen't improve low range unfortunately. In the UK the LT230 is available with a 1.6:1 high range, for use behind the 4 cyl petrol engine in the 110 and early defender. This will be a fair improvement over the 1.410 high range and 35" tyres for On road, but low range will be too high still IMHO. All you need to do is source the 1.61:1 high range geartrain EX UK, can't be all that expensive I reckon. Try PM'ing Ashtrans here?
    (I am thinking of making a 'sprint' version of a 110 or 90 with a 3.9efi, ZF auto, 32's and these High range gears for offroad short course events...Should be quick between points I reckon!)

    JC
    The Isuzu 110. Solid and as dependable as a rock, coming soon with auto box😊
    The Range Rover L322 4.4.TTDV8 ....probably won't bother with the remap..😈

  6. #6
    Rangier Rover Guest
    I have found 35s a bit hard on the guards on my 120. 33s seem to work fine + less stress. I don't seem to notice the change in gearing with the Turboed 4BD1

    Tony

  7. #7
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    thanks Tony, and now I am envious, 4bd1-T

  8. #8
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    Another cheap option is to use 4.7 gears from a Series 3 and Disco transfer gears. This will give you about a 63:1 low range and compensate very well for the 35's in high range.

    Use a complete front center from a Series 3 in the front (will drop straight in) and either the gears or center from a Series 3 Salisbury. A simple spacer is required with one of these rear options (I cant remember which).

    While 4.7's are probably a bit weaker in theory, the Salisbury is still plenty strong enough and 4.7 rover centers can almost be had for free these days if you do manage to break a front diff.

  9. #9
    Rangier Rover Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by mark2 View Post
    Another cheap option is to use 4.7 gears from a Series 3 and Disco transfer gears. This will give you about a 63:1 low range and compensate very well for the 35's in high range.

    Use a complete front center from a Series 3 in the front (will drop straight in) and either the gears or center from a Series 3 Salisbury. A simple spacer is required with one of these rear options (I cant remember which).

    While 4.7's are probably a bit weaker in theory, the Salisbury is still plenty strong enough and 4.7 rover centers can almost be had for free these days if you do manage to break a front diff.
    4.7s on 35's with a V8 Have you ever done this. It will spit front cwps and 10 spline shafts every day it's driven

    Tony

  10. #10
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    the county is lucky enough to have fine splines axles, so the CWP they don't like the torque is this correct.

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