I recently replaced rear wheel bearings, front tie rod, relay rod and new heavy duty 500kg springs in rear and extra leaf spring to front.
Fiddled around with front alignment and toe in. After a 200km drive, not too bad but needs a little bit more.
So, then I used some long straight 4mm steel flat bar as my straight edge guides and ran them along the length of the troopy, tyre to tyre.
The good side, the flat bar touches the back of the rear tyre, front of the rear tyre and without front tyre toe in touches the back and front of the rear tyre. Dead straight. Sweet.
But, on the other bad side, the flat bar can only touch the back of the rear tyre whilst touching the front tyre. It is not straight, front of rear tyre would be 5-8mm from the flat bar when touching the back of front tyre.
I think this explains why, when replacing rear wheel bearings, the bad side inner rear wheel bearing was stuck on the diff end and took some cutting and grinding to get off.
This leads me to think my rear diff got a bit bent in a previous life. It is ex rural fire brigade so not surprising. Could have been an all mighty whack on that rear wheel whilst reversing fast, maybe. Something pretty drastic to bend it.
I travelled well over 100000km with regular tyre rotations without even knowing my rear diff was a bit out. The tyres look ok and do not exhibit any noticeable uneven ware, coopers at3.
This means I have a 5-8mm banana bend over the (just under) 3m length from rear axle to front axle on the troopy .
It would be better if my rear diff end was dead straight. Simplest and best would be a whole new diff. Straigtening the end of a diff would be a difficult job with limited tools.
The rear hub fits and spins fine, just a pain to remove the inner bearing.
Do my observations sound possible? Should I be concerned?
Fiddled around with front alignment and toe in. After a 200km drive, not too bad but needs a little bit more.
So, then I used some long straight 4mm steel flat bar as my straight edge guides and ran them along the length of the troopy, tyre to tyre.
The good side, the flat bar touches the back of the rear tyre, front of the rear tyre and without front tyre toe in touches the back and front of the rear tyre. Dead straight. Sweet.
But, on the other bad side, the flat bar can only touch the back of the rear tyre whilst touching the front tyre. It is not straight, front of rear tyre would be 5-8mm from the flat bar when touching the back of front tyre.
I think this explains why, when replacing rear wheel bearings, the bad side inner rear wheel bearing was stuck on the diff end and took some cutting and grinding to get off.
This leads me to think my rear diff got a bit bent in a previous life. It is ex rural fire brigade so not surprising. Could have been an all mighty whack on that rear wheel whilst reversing fast, maybe. Something pretty drastic to bend it.
I travelled well over 100000km with regular tyre rotations without even knowing my rear diff was a bit out. The tyres look ok and do not exhibit any noticeable uneven ware, coopers at3.
This means I have a 5-8mm banana bend over the (just under) 3m length from rear axle to front axle on the troopy .
It would be better if my rear diff end was dead straight. Simplest and best would be a whole new diff. Straigtening the end of a diff would be a difficult job with limited tools.
The rear hub fits and spins fine, just a pain to remove the inner bearing.
Do my observations sound possible? Should I be concerned?