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Tampilkan postingan dengan label lr3. Tampilkan semua postingan

Senin, 22 Desember 2014

When Heat Fails Us

This is the time of year when we depend on heat in our cars.  For most of us, the heat delivers on its design promise.  For a few unfortunates, though, it doesn’t.  The mechanic checks the coolant level, and makes sure the thermostat is working as it should.  If the engine is up to temperature the next place to look is the heater control circuitry.  When all else fails we are left with the possibility that the heater core itself has failed.

Heater core replacement is the automotive equivalent of a root canal.  It's ugly, painful, and costly but sometimes it has to be done.

Heater cores are like small radiators that shed some of the engine’s heat into the passenger compartment.  There are two ways a heater core can fail – by leaking or by clogging.  Leaks are obvious because you’ve got coolant all over the floor.  Clogged cores are more subtle.



Take a look at this core from a 2006 Land Rover LR3.  There’s nothing obviously wrong from outside, but when we cut the core open we saw a different story.  The whole far side of the core is clogged.  Only the left side of the core remains open.




You might think that would cause weak heat, but it actually created a different problem. This Land Rover – like many other late model cars – has separate temperature controls for the driver and passenger.  The air that blows through the core is sent to the left and right sides respectively, so with one side clogged we had normal heat on the passenger side, and virtually no heat for the driver.

This seemed like a control problem but it wasn’t.  When heater cores clog the repair is often a big deal.  In this Land Rover the whole dash had to come out for repair, as you see.  Jobs like this can run into multiple days of labor, and cost thousands of dollars.  And this is no place to cut corners looking for a low bid – this is detailed work.  Every fastener left loose, and every broken bracket is a potential rattle.  There are a hundred electrical connections, and any that come loose are problems for tomorrow.  This is work for someone who knows Rovers and specializes in large interior repairs.




When a job like this is done there will be faults in the airbag system and many other dash electronic systems.  The person who does the work will need to have a factory-level test system to clear those faults and ensure everything is working as it should.




 At Robison Service we are proud to be known as experts in repairs like this.  Author John Robison is a long time Land Rover service manager, and a technical advisor to many Rover clubs.  He’s written many articles on Land Rover service – indexed here.

No Land Rovers were harmed in the writing of this story, and environmentally friendly repair methods were used throughout.  We are located in Springfield, Massachusetts, where we stand ready to provide top-quality service and repair to owners of BMW, Jaguar, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, Porsche, and Rolls-Royce and Bentley motorcars.


© J E Robison Service

Selasa, 01 April 2014

Hidden dangers in one-piece hubs


Another day, another brake job . . . but not so fast!

Take a look at this rear hub/brake assembly. It's a pretty typical worn out pad and rotor picture, one that we've addressed with a cleanup and new brake parts a thousand times before.  This one turned out different.



Thanks to Land Rover master technician Paul Ferreira for spotting a very subtle flaw.  Once the brake rotor had been removed, Paul noticed the wheel studs were not quite the same length. Take a look at what he saw, and see if you pick it up.  It's a small enough thing that I'll bet 99% of technicians would not give this a second glance.


Knowing that something was wrong, he looked a little harder.  Here's what he found.  I've put arrows and text on the photo to point the problem out:


It's kind of scary to think that the heads were popped off of three of five wheel studs on the right rear of this 2002 Range Rover.  Why did that happen? I have no idea, other than accumulated stress.  Why this wheel and not the others?  I don't know that either, maybe just luck.

The studs must have been broken for a while, because the lugs were all tight even though some were pulled halfway through the hub.  Presumably they pulled a little farther every time a wheel was torqued into place, and they would have eventually gotten to the point where they'd have given way, perhaps suddenly.

The moral of this story - check the wheel studs whenever they are exposed for service.  Sometimes part like this - bits we think of as permanent - really aren't.

(c) 2014 John Elder Robison

John Elder Robison is the general manager of J E Robison Service Company, independent Land Rover restoration and repair specialists in Springfield, Massachusetts.  John is a longtime technical consultant to the Land Rover, Mercedes, BMW, Porsche and Rolls Royce Owner's Clubs, and he’s owned and restored many of these fine vehicles.  Find him online at www.robisonservice.com or in the real world at 413-785-1665