Despite the oil burning issues, my rebuilt engine is much smoother and quieter than before.
This has drawn my attention to minor vibrations on acceleration, because I can hear and feel them now!
It's not too bad, but as the revs go up there's vibration and it sort of puts you off wanting to get a few more mph out of that gear. Plus, it would be nice to have other areas of the Landy quietened down a bit to compliment the engine.
I've always greased the UJ's and props every 6k as part of the service. In 12 years of owning the Landy and 100k miles covered, I've never changed a UJ
I presume they'll get a bit of leverage applied for the MOT and they've never developed any knocks.
So, I'm wondering how transformational, in terms of vibration removal, is it when you change the UJ's? I'm talking not wrecked ones, but they must be worn. I could also look to see if there are marks where balance weights have fallen off the props.
When I take it out of gear and coast it's smooth and vibration free. Are the UJ's and props the right things to be looking at?
This has drawn my attention to minor vibrations on acceleration, because I can hear and feel them now!
It's not too bad, but as the revs go up there's vibration and it sort of puts you off wanting to get a few more mph out of that gear. Plus, it would be nice to have other areas of the Landy quietened down a bit to compliment the engine.
I've always greased the UJ's and props every 6k as part of the service. In 12 years of owning the Landy and 100k miles covered, I've never changed a UJ
So, I'm wondering how transformational, in terms of vibration removal, is it when you change the UJ's? I'm talking not wrecked ones, but they must be worn. I could also look to see if there are marks where balance weights have fallen off the props.
When I take it out of gear and coast it's smooth and vibration free. Are the UJ's and props the right things to be looking at?