90 Steering Problems

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David Garton

Guest
After spending an afternoon sorting the Defender 110 ('96) for its MOT. I
have a problem with my steering.

The Defender is shod with standard alloy wheels and tyres. The problem is
that the steering to the nearside causes the tyre to rub on the front
'radious arm'. Having checked the tyre pressures, steering check stops etc
everything looks right.

Any Idea what I should be looking at next and how it can be corrected.

This being the first time I have taken this vehicle for an MOT can anyone
point me in the right direction for things to look out for other than the
general 'car' items.

THANKS



 
In message <[email protected]>
"David Garton" <[email protected]> wrote:

> After spending an afternoon sorting the Defender 110 ('96) for its MOT. I
> have a problem with my steering.
>
> The Defender is shod with standard alloy wheels and tyres. The problem is
> that the steering to the nearside causes the tyre to rub on the front
> 'radious arm'. Having checked the tyre pressures, steering check stops etc
> everything looks right.
>
> Any Idea what I should be looking at next and how it can be corrected.
>
> This being the first time I have taken this vehicle for an MOT can anyone
> point me in the right direction for things to look out for other than the
> general 'car' items.
>
> THANKS
>
>
>


For whatever reason the lock stop isn't. Unless there's any obvious
damage, or track rod end has been changed and not set correctly,
or similar, it'll need adjuasting.

Richard
--
www.beamends-lrspares.co.uk [email protected]
www.radioparadise.com - Good Music, No Vine
Lib Dems - Townies keeping comedy alive
 

David Garton wrote:
> After spending an afternoon sorting the Defender 110 ('96) for its MOT. I
> have a problem with my steering.
>
> The Defender is shod with standard alloy wheels and tyres. The problem is
> that the steering to the nearside causes the tyre to rub on the front
> 'radious arm'. Having checked the tyre pressures, steering check stops etc
> everything looks right.
>
> Any Idea what I should be looking at next and how it can be corrected.
>
> This being the first time I have taken this vehicle for an MOT can anyone
> point me in the right direction for things to look out for other than the
> general 'car' items.
>
> THANKS


David,

This is definitley your lock stops, get a Haynes manual from Halfords
or Amazon.
Lock stops should be adjusted if you fit bigger wheels than standard -
i.e. 205x16 to 750x16 else the tyre scraps the radius arm on full lock.
Suggest you lift wach wheel in the air and grab top and bottom - any
movement or clunking is an imediate and quick MOT failure.

Peter

 
On or around 4 Oct 2006 09:10:18 -0700, [email protected]
enlightened us thusly:

>
>David Garton wrote:
>> After spending an afternoon sorting the Defender 110 ('96) for its MOT. I
>> have a problem with my steering.
>>
>> The Defender is shod with standard alloy wheels and tyres. The problem is
>> that the steering to the nearside causes the tyre to rub on the front
>> 'radious arm'. Having checked the tyre pressures, steering check stops etc
>> everything looks right.
>>
>> Any Idea what I should be looking at next and how it can be corrected.
>>
>> This being the first time I have taken this vehicle for an MOT can anyone
>> point me in the right direction for things to look out for other than the
>> general 'car' items.
>>
>> THANKS

>
>David,
>
>This is definitley your lock stops, get a Haynes manual from Halfords
>or Amazon.


Note that the RHS lock stop is the one to stop the LHS wheel hitting the
radius arm, and vice versa.

Make sure the tracking's right first.
--
Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
"My centre is giving way, my right is in retreat; situation excellent.
I shall attack. - Marshal Foch (1851 - 1929)
 
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