Home > Puma (Tdci) > Another output shaft failure... |
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Happyoldgit Member Since: 14 Sep 2007 Location: Norfolk Posts: 3471 |
Apparently not fixed, you either wait and hope for the best or inspect and deal with it accordingly.
As I keep saying the official Land Rover line [or passing the buck to the dealers] regarding the issue as published on this forum is Steve. Owned numerous Land Rover vehicles of all shapes and sizes over the decades. Current Defender: A non tarts hand-bagged Puma 110 XS USW. [Insert something impressive here such as extensive list of previous Land Rovers or examples of your prestigeous and expensive items, trinkets, houses, bikes, vehicles etc] http://forums.lr4x4.com I used to be Miserable ...but now I'm ecstatic. |
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19th May 2016 9:24am |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
forgive .....but that sounds easy enough to achieve. why hasn't anyone tried that yet? |
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19th May 2016 10:14am |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
You bet. There is marginally more chance that there is some lubricant on more recent vehicles, but it is pretty evident that many premature failures are occurring. Some years do seem to be worse than others - there don't seem to be many 2007 failures, but there seem to be a great many 2010 failures, for example (info based on a statistically-inadequate survey of Def2 Forum members, so far from conclusive).
based on above and assuming lubrication isn't the only reason why would the 2007 models fair better than 2010? did something else change ie is the spec on the gear boxes and transfer box identical? |
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19th May 2016 10:20am |
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blackwolf Member Since: 03 Nov 2009 Location: South West England Posts: 17450 |
Who knows, perhaps an additional supplier came online, or a different subcontractor, or parts were supplied which didn't conform to spec, or a different assembly method was used. We will never know.
Landrover however definitely should know or be able to find out, and the fact that they haven't suggests that this problem doesn't exist on their radar, probably because not enough failures are reported to them or repaired under warranty (or they don't care because there are now so few vehicles still under warranty, and the number will get smaller year on year for the next 3 years). If, however, someone had their shaft fail somewhere catastrophic, for example on a level crossing, and the failure resulted in multiple fatalities and a public outrage, then I bet something would be done. Perhaps if the Puma Defender had been sold in the US of A, the home of liability litigation, something would have been done. |
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19th May 2016 11:44am |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
good idea BW.
could we perhaps get someones Puma that has just failed. fill it with some thieving low lifes and push it onto a train line and perhaps off the back of that LR might introduce a recall? good thinking. |
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19th May 2016 11:51am |
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LR90XS2011 Member Since: 05 Apr 2011 Location: bickenhill Posts: 3645 |
what about the poor train driver /passengers, didnt go well last time a train hit a land rover
http://i.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2011/02/28/...68x286.jpg DEFENDER 90 TDCI XS, I hope everyone is well and your land rovers make you happy |
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19th May 2016 6:58pm |
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Happyoldgit Member Since: 14 Sep 2007 Location: Norfolk Posts: 3471 |
Probably best you stick to fault finding on your own vehicle Wayne. Steve.
Owned numerous Land Rover vehicles of all shapes and sizes over the decades. Current Defender: A non tarts hand-bagged Puma 110 XS USW. [Insert something impressive here such as extensive list of previous Land Rovers or examples of your prestigeous and expensive items, trinkets, houses, bikes, vehicles etc] http://forums.lr4x4.com I used to be Miserable ...but now I'm ecstatic. |
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19th May 2016 9:37pm |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
I've had to give up Steve - I've concluded there simply isn't enough days in the week to complete my fault finding.........and the saga continues. clank clank clank from underneath (gearbox area) trust you're still keep well / happy tho ? |
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20th May 2016 6:35am |
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Happyoldgit Member Since: 14 Sep 2007 Location: Norfolk Posts: 3471 |
I'm my usual chipper self thanks Steve.
Owned numerous Land Rover vehicles of all shapes and sizes over the decades. Current Defender: A non tarts hand-bagged Puma 110 XS USW. [Insert something impressive here such as extensive list of previous Land Rovers or examples of your prestigeous and expensive items, trinkets, houses, bikes, vehicles etc] http://forums.lr4x4.com I used to be Miserable ...but now I'm ecstatic. |
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20th May 2016 8:54am |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
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20th May 2016 12:08pm |
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AlanH Member Since: 15 Mar 2010 Location: WA Posts: 242 |
Whether or not that damned shaft or anything else got greased was probably down to whoever assembled it.... some cared and didn't mind a bit of grease between the fingers, others hated it.
In the latter years of my fitter apprenticeship (Blaw Knox Rochester '59 - 64) I built gearboxes for pavers/graders etc. and took the utmost care in matching shafts to gears etc. No play was my aim, or very little, good sliding fit. A friend who was known as a big hammer man would slap stuff together anyway he could to earn more money on the bonus (piecework) system. His idea of matching parts was to use a chisel to take up slack on splines...... This got found out pretty quick by the job inspectors. Guess who got the best jobs requiring skill and it wasn't him. Even the union told him he was to blame and wouldn't back his complaints of not getting the best jobs. I suspect LR and other mass production type jobs suffer from exactly his attitude from some of their workers. And we pay for it with breakdowns. My MY2010 with 160K on the clock will be modified soon. AlanH. |
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21st May 2016 8:28am |
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YOLO110 Member Since: 14 Feb 2015 Location: Perth Oz and Stansted UK Posts: 1645 |
The one thing that really bothers me with all of this... is that if/when the output shaft fails, it is simply replaced by JLR with a new identical version. So the same ticking time bomb remains...
Seems to me the only way to go is with replacing it with a design fix that is proven not to fail... YOLO... You Only Live Once... |
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21st May 2016 10:48am |
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Caterham Member Since: 06 Nov 2008 Location: Birmingham Posts: 6300 |
Does such a thing exist tho?
I think I may have said this (or similar) before? In theory this method should be fine ie it's in essence the same as the drive flanges and how the friction plate attaches. No doubt it's the same as how much the gearbox out put shafts on the other models attach to transfer box ie male / female connection so presumably it's the way it's been implemented that's the problem. So what is causing the premature failures. Once we know that perhaps we can work out a fix. To my mind the lateral play on the gbox output shaft can't be helping? Or am I just talking waffle? |
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21st May 2016 12:23pm |
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R1200GS Member Since: 12 Jul 2015 Location: Hampshire Posts: 265 |
Never seen a report on the Ashcroft unit failing yet ........
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21st May 2016 3:27pm |
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