There is no other vehicle that uses the same axles as the D2 .
I think the D2 is not the ideal vehicle to "Engineer"
I'm looking to get my D2 engineered for larger tyres.
Have spoken to Paul at Les Richmond Automotive regarding this and he put me onto Bill Malkoutzis from Talk Torque Automotive (0409 439 315, Eltham, Victoria, http://www.lrautomotive.com.au/conte...-us/d4875.html ) who I spoke to this morning.
Bill has suggested to me to find out what axels are in my Discovery 2 ( http://www.aulro.com/afvb/showthread...77#post1855477 ) and informed me that if there is another vehicle that comes out with the same axels standard, but with larger tyres, I should be able to get the engineered compliance based on this.
Under the Vehicle Standards Bulletin 14 (VSB 14) National Code of Practice for Light Vehicle Construction and Modification (NCOP) at Vehicle Standards Bulletin 14 (VSB 14), I can increase the tyre size by 50mm (2"). So if there is another vehicle, such as a Defender that comes standard with the same axels as the Discovery, but with larger tyres, I can go 50mm larger than this second vehicle and should be able to get the compliance plate without any special testing or swerve testing (saving a lot of time and money).
There is no other vehicle that uses the same axles as the D2 .
I think the D2 is not the ideal vehicle to "Engineer"
Hmmmm... I'm starting to feel like you are correct. Bill suggested he had done it previously based on the Defenders. I can get him paperwork for him, but at a cost yet to be determined by him.
The Defender comes out with tyres approximately 2" larger than the Discovery 2 from standard. Here in Tassie you can lift your Defender up by 2" and increase the tyres sizes up to 33.5" without any engineering being needed, meanwhile the D2 with it's more advanced handling (thanks to the ACE) stays low... Maybe it would just be easier to fit a Defender tyre placard...
Anways, I have contacted an Engineering Signatory here in Tasmania that comes highly recommended from my girlfriends dad (he assisted him in gaining Special Interest Registration for his race car with a roll cage, gutted interior, battery in the boot, etc.), so I'll wait and see what he says about it all. It's a public holiday ehre today, so will probably be a little while...
Defenders are 32" standard tyre so helps a bit there with respect to mods before engineering compliance.
The only real difference is the ends, the housing is pretty much the same. Just has open knuckles instead of the swivel balls. These are welded the same way, by rotary friction. They were also fitted with 18's on the same housing so you could go the +mm size on to the 18" dimensions.
Apart from that, I like the thinking in fitting the different placard.
Thats like saying the diff housing off a Patrol is basically the same as its painted black...
There are very few similarities apart from the mounting face for the diff centre.
Almost everything else is different.
Knuckles instead of swivel ball.
Knuckes are welded on.
ball is a bolted connection.
Width is different, overall and bare housing.
totally different hub / wheel bearing and brake setup
different suspension mounts
Not only that, but also Watts linkage on the rear as opposed to an A frame.
Different shock mounting set up on the front.
Anti roll bar mounting position the other side of the housings.
not fully floating.
Different axles and cv's
There is no way you can argue they are almost the same...
Now it is just getting ridiculous. You can remove any axle from any 4x4 and substitute it with any other axle (if you swap the brackets over).
FFS - just admit you are wrong.
From your responses in red it seems you don't even understand what a full floating axle is???
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