New seals in now, am i meant to torque the nut or just tighten it up until tight?
torque it up really on this one, cant remember the tension, but its rather tight
to undo mine, I used a breaker, wedged agains the chassis, low box, and in gear, start it up, foot on brake, let off the clutch gently till it takes up the slack, then a couple of jerks n it came off.
workshop manual says 96lbs/ft.
if its an early diff then it has spacers so thats fine, if its td5 or later then it has compression shims - you must not torque it further than the compression shim has already been compressed or you will overload your diff bearings. You basically mark it before you take it off, count the number of turns to remove it then do it up to exactly that mark and number of turns again
To remove the nut it used a jack under then end of a breaker bar to apply constant pressure then tapped the end of the socket with a ball pein hammer - my nut came undone with a bang!! I also used a piece of bar drilled to match one side of the drive flange - i bolted this to the flange and used it to counter the turning of the transmission.
Dont try do it with you vehicle jacked up it will pull forwards (even with the hand brake on) and may hurt you. do it with all 4 wheels on the floor
? td5 diffs use std shims ,salisbury and freelander use collapsible spacer and they are set by checking rolling resistance,counting turns isnt really a good enough method
Did mine this afternoon, got the split pin out and it was loose!, still counted the turns anyways, replaced the seal counted turns back on and was tight after another half turn.
Then applied more tension until split pin hole lined up, guessed this was about right.
cant really apply accurate torque if then have to slacken or further tighten to allign split pin holes?