antonio
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posted on 21/12/09 at 07:16 PM |
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best place to go for diff rebuilt
hi
i'm looking for someone capable of putting my new LSD in my diff.that may sound crazy but no one here in france to help.i tried to do it by
myself, but i can't unscrew the two bearings (if you understand what i try to say!)
if someone can advise me a good place to go (in kent would be good!) or if someone here is able to do it for good money, i would be very happy.
best regards, merry Xmas
antonio
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prawnabie
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posted on 21/12/09 at 07:18 PM |
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procomp are good
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Coopz
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posted on 21/12/09 at 07:25 PM |
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Phil at Road and Race did my diff fantastic guy and great service turned it around in a day! Looked brand new I believe he rebuild most of
Caterham's too!
Road & Race Transmissions
The Bullock Shed
Filston Farm
Shoreham, Kent ( In kent too)
TN14 5JU
tel: 01959 525105
mobile: 07836 333882
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Project7
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posted on 21/12/09 at 09:35 PM |
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Yup, I can reccommend Phil at Road and Race too.
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Steve Hignett
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posted on 21/12/09 at 09:39 PM |
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As above, road & race
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Willie
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posted on 21/12/09 at 10:24 PM |
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Antonio, (Class name by the way)
I assume you're talking about a Sierra diff, and by unscrew the bearings you mean the big castellated nuts on the sides that contain the
bearings?
These:
Get the diff into a vice and if you can get a bit of heavy flat bar that's just thin enough to fit between the teeth, and long enough for stacks
of leverage, you should be able to get them shifted. Here's what I use:
If that's still difficult, soak around the edge of the nut with WD40 and let it sit overnight.
I fitted my own LSD and intend to do some rebuilding soon, as I'm tranferring my LSD into a different ratio diff. If you take your time, its
actually quite easy. I advise measuring the backlash before you dismantle the side nuts, so you know how far in to mesh the crownwheel on
re-assembly.
Hope this helps,
Willie
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mark chandler
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posted on 21/12/09 at 11:24 PM |
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As above, but for a little extra help use a blow torch to heat the surround, do not get really hot as there is a rubber seal but it helps to get
started. Once they move they come out easily enough.
Regards Mark
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antonio
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posted on 22/12/09 at 07:37 AM |
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cheers for your answers guys!
i didn't try to loosen the big castellated nuts because i suspected them to brake if i don't use the right tool.
i'll try this week end
many thanks
antonio
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Mopple
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posted on 22/12/09 at 10:36 AM |
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For assurance you could weld extra pieces of flat far perpendicularly to distribute the load more evenly.
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Willie
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posted on 22/12/09 at 05:33 PM |
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They shouldn't be too tight as you set them like you set a wheel bearing, wind in until there is no more play in the crownwheel. I can't
mind if you then wind on a few teeth preload or not.
Any I've played with, so far, have been easy enough to shift.
Willie
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