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  #1  
Old 04-05-12, 19:38
rob love rob love is offline
carrier mech
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Shilo MB, the armpit of Canada
Posts: 7,586
Default For want of a nail, the war was lost (Lynx story).

For want of a nail, the shoe was lost, for want of a shoe, the horse was lost etc....

So anyway, poetry aside, a month and a bit ago I started working on a Lynx scout car at the Shilo museum. It had a severe shifting problem, getting caught in gear or unable to shift into a gear. The main volunteer mechanic felt it was in the front remote shifter mechanism, and after removing it from the vehicle, sure enough, there was some wear on the bottom plate that made it look like the shifters were interfering with each other. I built up the bottom plate, cleaned out the rust and crap, new O-rings, and reassembled it, making sure everything was free pin fit with the linkages running to the transmission. Steering was also jamming up, so the nose to the vehicle was removed, and the coupling to the pitman arm was found to be loose and coming apart. That was fixed. After that, the vehicle got a complete brake job (new double flared steel lines to replace the copper lines someone had installed with single flares), all new cyls including master, new flex lines, and wheel seals of course. Then on to the electrical. Lots of bare wires and splices, so all the wiring was gutted, and new braided wire installed, all numbered by the book. All new toggle switches, all lights repaired and made functional. Then on to the fuel system. All new lines, 3 way valve fixed up, large cannister filter on the frame with an electric pump installed to function as a primer (like the original autopulse). Carb had already been done but a choke setup was arranged, and the fuel pump was already new. Gas tanks have been sent downtown for cleaning and repair. Oh yeah, and I made a new front fender to replace a badly bent up one.

So after all that, yesterday I go to finally drive it out of the shop. I had some fuel problems, which were the result of running on a POW can of gas as the fuel tanks were still downtown. But then the unthinkable: the lynx got stuck in 3rd gear again....hopelessly stuck. I managed to get it back into the shop, and today managed to get it onto the hoist. After all this work I was very discouraged, and sure I was pulling the engine to fix up the transmission. I'd had to disconnect the linkage to the 3rd and 4th gear shift and pry the shifter back into neutral against great resistance.

So anyway, I get it onto the hoist, and had the drain pan all ready to pull the oil, when I decided to look at things again. That's when I noticed a bit of shine on one of the greasy clevis pins at the transmission rails. No cotter pin. And another pin only had a small piece of thin copper wire through it. This was allowing the clevis pin to vibrate down and jam up with the reverse shifter shaft.

So with 2 X 3¢ cotter pins installed, I held my breath, started up the lynx, and headed outside for a nice mile long road test. It performed flawlessly. What a hoot to drive.

Sometimes it's the little things that really count, and make all the difference.

Last edited by rob love; 04-05-12 at 19:57.
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  #2  
Old 04-05-12, 20:11
Bruce Parker (RIP) Bruce Parker (RIP) is offline
GM Fox I
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: SW Ontario, Canada
Posts: 2,606
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Rob, sometimes it goes the other way. I got the Fox back from an outing last summer and put in the garage to remove the 50 cal. Browning (you may know the one). There, in the middle of the floor was a 1/2" diameter polished metal rod, about 3" long with a machined recess in the middle. Rust free, it recently fell out of somewhere. I think I know where every pin/hinge/clevis goes having put each one in personally. But where this one came from (or should go back to) I have no idea. So far everything is running OK and nothing has fallen off.
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  #3  
Old 04-05-12, 21:21
charlie fitton's Avatar
charlie fitton charlie fitton is offline
HLIofC - Normandy Pl
 
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: Maryhill Ontario
Posts: 943
Default .

(Ah - the fun you can ahve taking spare parts to a show...)
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Charles Fitton
Maryhill On.,
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too many carriers
too many rovers
not enough time.
(and now a BSA...)
(and now a Triumph TRW...)
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  #4  
Old 04-05-12, 22:07
Lynn Eades Lynn Eades is offline
Bluebell
 
Join Date: May 2003
Location: Tauranga, New Zealand
Posts: 5,541
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Good one Charlie, now...who don't I like?
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Carrier Armoured O.P. No1 Mk3 W. T84991
Carrier Bren No2.Mk.I. NewZealand Railways. NZR.6.
Dodge WC55. 37mm Gun Motor Carriage M6
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So many questions....
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  #5  
Old 04-05-12, 22:12
Bruce Parker (RIP) Bruce Parker (RIP) is offline
GM Fox I
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: SW Ontario, Canada
Posts: 2,606
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Quote:
Originally Posted by charlie fitton View Post
(Ah - the fun you can ahve taking spare parts to a show...)
Hmmmmm....come to think of it you WERE there....

Do you want you PIN, SECURING (CONFUSION) Mk.II back?
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  #6  
Old 05-05-12, 01:50
rob love rob love is offline
carrier mech
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Shilo MB, the armpit of Canada
Posts: 7,586
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Didn't somebody do that at a sailing race one time? They tossed a loose pin into the other teams boat and they were so concerned trying to find where it came from they blew the race.


Next challenge on the lynx will be to stop the last of the leaks from the brake system. I thought I would give DOT5 silicone brake fluid a try, and am starting to regret it. I'll be replacing two or three lines on Monday, as I have overtightened them trying to stop them from leaking and likely split the flares. To top it off, I think one of my brand new cylinders is also leaking. Lucky that they pay me by the hour and not by production.
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  #7  
Old 05-05-12, 17:21
Mike Cecil Mike Cecil is offline
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Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Cody, Wyoming, USA
Posts: 2,372
Default The Art of Confusion

This thread reminds me of a visit I made to the Australian Army's Maintenance Engineering Agency in the early 1990s, when the new ASLAV was being introduced into service. I arranged for a photo shoot to illustrate the article I was writing, and my contact said to come back later in the week after he'd had a chance to put some bogus 'bumps' and aerials on the vehicle.

His comment was that modelling magazines were a low grade source of intelligence, so he was going to drive some foreign int officer mad trying to work out what the Australian Army were installing in their ASLAVs!!

Must take an assortment of nuts, bolts and clevis pins to the next MVPA convention ....

Mike C
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  #8  
Old 05-05-12, 18:56
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Yeo.NT Yeo.NT is offline
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Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Petawawa Ontario
Posts: 211
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If DOT5 fluid is used in a braking system designed for DOT3 and DOT4 the seals will breakdown and degrade.
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