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#1
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Been driving my little 1950 Land Rover around . The locals stare at it or me , not sure why ! It has a 1954 engine and 56 transmission.
A strange ongoing mechanical issue came up , go for a drive and from the start the gearbox and clutch behaved normally , after 10 mins on a bitumen road strange things , gear selection not easy , very crunchy and sometimes gears refused to mesh. First gear impossible to select. Whats going on, behaves with no problems when cold but after a drive it all jams up . Checked oil levels , adjusted the clutch linkages , still have the problem. ![]() Then a hammer hit me, after a drive on a dirt road , the problem goes away . I discovered the answer. Anybody have the answer ? Quiz time .
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1940 cab 11 C8 1940 Morris-Commercial PU 1941 Morris-Commercial CS8 1940 Chev. 15cwt GS Van ( Aust.) 1942-45 Jeep salad |
#2
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#3
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As Bruce mentions, my money says 4 wheel drive on a hard surface along with incorrect tire pressures. It causes driveline wrap up, and will overheat the gearboxes, making the oil have different properties.
On the old 5/4 ton, if you drove in hi-lok at high speed, the front diff (which seemed to be the weakest link in the drivetrain with it's puny dana44 diff) would boil the hypoid, causing it to spray out the vent tube into the engine compartment. |
#4
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my guess would be that it is stuck in high ratio 4x4, either the yellow knob is depressed or the internal mechanism is stuck.
jon
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1950 Land Rover series 1 1967 Land Rover series 2A LWB 1986 Land Rover series 3 SWB 1938 DKW SB200 1944 DKW NZ350-1 1967 Ural K750 sidecar outfit 1944 VW Kubelwagen KDF82 1942 Steyr 1500A 1944 Morris C8A 1943 Chevrolet CMP8A HUP? 194? Bedford QL |
#5
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Early Series 1 are constant 4wd (not solid, and not differentiated, but with a ratchet-type front axle drive), but the front diff ratio is higher than the rear diff ratio, only by a few decimals, not noticeable on loose surfaces, but enough to cause wind-up on long drives on sealed road surfaces.
Oh, and the neighbors think that anyone driving a Series 1 must be a little odd. |
#6
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But this has a 1956 gearbox, so not constant 4x4.
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1950 Land Rover series 1 1967 Land Rover series 2A LWB 1986 Land Rover series 3 SWB 1938 DKW SB200 1944 DKW NZ350-1 1967 Ural K750 sidecar outfit 1944 VW Kubelwagen KDF82 1942 Steyr 1500A 1944 Morris C8A 1943 Chevrolet CMP8A HUP? 194? Bedford QL |
#7
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I will go for the yellow knob being down. Once had a call from a guy who bought a Series 2 on Ebay, it was delivered while he was out, he then drove it up his lane and was shocked at the transmission noise. I went over to look at it and before he appeared I noticed the yellow knob was down. When he arrived I jacked up one front wheel and said to tell me when it turns freely, I discreetly moved the transfer box lever and he said it now turns. Then said to him to drive it up the lane. He thought I was a magician as he had no idea what I did! When it had been loaded on to the transporter I guess the driver put it in 4wd.
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Richard 1943 Bedford QLD lorry - 1941 BSA WM20 m/cycle - 1943 Daimler Scout Car Mk2 Member of MVT, IMPS, MVG of NSW, KVE and AMVCS KVE President & KVE News Editor |
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