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Most of the time when I turn the steering wheel I will get a loud bang/clonk from the front of the rangie and the whole front jumps when it's a big one, I have been told it's the panard rod bushes would this correct? if not any ideas? Ben
this is going to sound stupid but here goes what should I be looking for and how do I tell if a bush has gone? :oops:
I'm in Kent, There is very slight movement at full lock but apart from that there is no other movement, is there anything else it could be? Ben
Check the hockey stick bushes aren't loose. Rusty rem marks around the bolt heads are one giveaway.Otherwsie wit an assistant try moving off forwardas and reverse and see if you can tell where the noise comes from.
Does it clonk as you turn the steering or when you are going round a corner?
Then possibly a CV as they work harder on corners or a siezed transfer box viscous unit as the differential works harder on tight turns, this could manifest it'self as banging in the transmission if the resulting wind up is being released either by a wheel skipping or by mechanical damage.Try jacking up a front wheel and in neutral with the handbrake on try to turn the wheel with a wheel nut wrench, it should turn very slowly, very, but if you can't turn it at all then the viscous is siezed.
Your could be the panhard rod that's loose then :-k if it's just one biggish clonk, or the drop arm loose 8-[
How easy is it to strip down the hub etc. and renew the CV joint's?
Quote from: benbenukuk on April 09, 2008, 15:37:07How easy is it to strip down the hub etc. and renew the CV joint's?Not massivley hard.-Wheel off-Calliper off (you may have to remove the top swivel pin bolts to move the brake pipe bracket, hold the hub up with a jack to stop oil escaping then put the botls back in.-non-ABS axles, remove the outer drive shaftRemove the hub nuts and hub/bearing/disk assyremove the stub axlepull the CV out, the half shaft may come with it in whch case support the half shaft to protect the oil seal inside the chrome swivel once it is away from the halfshaft bearing -ABS axles, remove the circlip and the shims below it, keep them safe (you find them under a black palastic cap)remove the outer drive flangeRemove the hub nuts and remove the hub/bearing/disk assyremove the stub axle, carefully it has an oil seal withinwithdraw the CV/halfshaft assy as the CV is secured to the shaft with a snap ring, be careful to protect the oil seal inside the chrome swivel as there is no bearing to supprt the halfshaftIf nothing goes wrong, maybe an hour, maybe 2.Things to be careful of-The stub axle bolts can pull metal out of the threads into the steering knuckle, it's cast iron. If the female thread is damaged the knuckle is scrapCheck the stub axle carefully for signs of damaged from a siezed bearing, the surface dameg can stop the bearing running true and the heat damage will effect the stub axle's hardness/strengthsupport the calliper on a bucket, you can get away without disconnecting the brake hydraulics if you are careful with the short pipes on the calliper.Oil will escape from the swivle, best to drain it before you start. You'll proabably find it begins to leaks afterwards anyway regardless, they do that