warninglight Posted December 20, 2023 Posted December 20, 2023 My first D2 used to do the same, graphite powder helps, the other thing I found was to give the key a good rattle, remove it, and wait for the noise as the tumblers spring back to where they should be, then try again. It's caused by gunk inside the barrel, and from memory wd-40 etc make it worse. https://landroverforums.com/forum/discovery-ii-18/ignition-lock-fix-35422/
Spiny Norman Posted December 20, 2023 Posted December 20, 2023 One of my K11 Micras did the same, to the extent that for a few days I had to park it with the key in the ignition and a woolly hat casually draped over the steering wheel so people couldn't see! Cured it by squirting lots of electrical contact cleaner down the slot, then used clock oil (3 in 1 would probably do but never WD40) on the key, stick it in, pull it out, wipe the crud off it over and over (OOO-ERRR missus!!) until it comes out clean and it was no bother after that. DialATune 1
sutty2006 Posted January 13, 2024 Author Posted January 13, 2024 I payed a man to remove the headlining, fix all the water leaks and refit a new headlining. there were a few leaks, front sunroof had a loose bolt that the riv nut was spinning. The sunroof was removed. I repaired the riv nut for him the truckers way and it was resealed and refitted. there was a leak from the front nearside roof channel drain, that’d been sealed. And the rear of the roof has a bung for an additional aerial which was loose. The rear sunroof and roof rails were loose, all retightened. the new headlining was refitted, and the interior lights upgraded while it was there. Mrcento, beko1987, djim and 16 others 19
N Dentressangle Posted January 14, 2024 Posted January 14, 2024 That seems very sensible. Horrible job I would imagine. Who did you use and how much? Saabnut 1
sutty2006 Posted January 15, 2024 Author Posted January 15, 2024 On 14/01/2024 at 10:08, N Dentressangle said: That seems very sensible. Horrible job I would imagine. Who did you use and how much? MSJ headliners of Yorkshire. Lovely bloke and top job. I payed £300 but I think his prices have increased slightly in the new year. Wasn’t worth me wrestling with it and he did a fantastic job. goosey 1
N Dentressangle Posted January 15, 2024 Posted January 15, 2024 Nice one. Worth paying for a job like that, where your first go is also your last, and is likely to be pretty shabby
sutty2006 Posted January 15, 2024 Author Posted January 15, 2024 40 minutes ago, N Dentressangle said: Nice one. Worth paying for a job like that, where your first go is also your last, and is likely to be pretty shabby Exactly. It would have taken me all day and a lot of swearing, cups of strong coffee to get it out. Then strip the front sunroof out and reseal, plus all the other little leaks there were. Etc etc mk2_craig 1
sutty2006 Posted February 26, 2024 Author Posted February 26, 2024 Noticed the other day that the power steering fluid was going down. Couldn’t see any leaks. The reason? Some c**ts swapped the cap over with the ACE cap. So it’s the ACE system that’s leaking.. great. If these run out of fluid the pump sets on fire. Lovely! Here’s the leak bottom pipe connection is leaking only when engine is running though. Bottom pipe is rusty but hopefully not leaking itself. I’ll be replacing the seal in the block on Thursday. Dyslexic Viking, Coprolalia, Lacquer Peel and 3 others 1 5
sutty2006 Posted February 28, 2024 Author Posted February 28, 2024 My worst fears hit me yesterday. The pipe is split. it’s also stuck in the valve block, which is going to take some getting out without damaging the block. ordered two new metal pipes, pointless doing one and not the other as it looks like it’s leaking too. This job is going to cost me just over £250 so far and that’s doing it myself. lesapandre, Scruffy Bodger, rainagain and 5 others 8
N Dentressangle Posted February 28, 2024 Posted February 28, 2024 I'm guessing this is why people often remove the ACE system?
sutty2006 Posted February 29, 2024 Author Posted February 29, 2024 11 hours ago, N Dentressangle said: I'm guessing this is why people often remove the ACE system? Yes. They leak for fun. Which is a pain. The high / low pressure pipes come in 4 sections which if bought completely will set you back 500, then there’s the two to the front ram and two to the back so another 500. Then the seals are 20 quid a throw……. Very expensive system to keep on top of. Normal roll bar system and the pulley/belt system will cost 250 second hand. So yeah, a cheaper version. Won’t handle as good though. N Dentressangle 1
jakebullet Posted February 29, 2024 Posted February 29, 2024 Top quality* shitpart too. Hate to guess how much genuine is.
straightSix Posted February 29, 2024 Posted February 29, 2024 4 hours ago, sutty2006 said: Yes. They leak for fun. Which is a pain. The high / low pressure pipes come in 4 sections which if bought completely will set you back 500, then there’s the two to the front ram and two to the back so another 500. Then the seals are 20 quid a throw……. Very expensive system to keep on top of. Normal roll bar system and the pulley/belt system will cost 250 second hand. So yeah, a cheaper version. Won’t handle as good though. I'd say worth keeping it you can though. Driving mine and my friends back to back, mine converted to springs and his still with ACE, his drove so much better sutty2006 1
sutty2006 Posted February 29, 2024 Author Posted February 29, 2024 7 minutes ago, jakebullet said: Top quality* shitpart too. Hate to guess how much genuine is. Yeah, not keen to be honest, but they seam to be the only company selling the pipes. These are going to get a liberal dose of waxoil once fitted and operational
sutty2006 Posted February 29, 2024 Author Posted February 29, 2024 This is the current scene of destruction. One pipe off, one to go. N Dentressangle, cbowditch, Tickman and 1 other 4
sutty2006 Posted February 29, 2024 Author Posted February 29, 2024 Pipes took some getting out. Luckily I made two tools for the assistance of the extraction process. First was made from 3mm side guard lamp bracket, which bent immediately. The second was made from an 8mm thick shift rod out of a truck gearbox. That one didn’t mess about. the seals were extracted by running an m10 bolt into it and using the same extraction tool to remove. Scruffy Bodger, jakebullet, Dyslexic Viking and 9 others 12
sutty2006 Posted March 1, 2024 Author Posted March 1, 2024 Well. It’s temporarily fixed. Both high/low pipes have been changed, however the front ram pipes are leaking. Ok, not as much as the others were, but still leaking. Can’t afford to replace them so it’ll have to leak ever so slightly until I can. gave the new pipes some temp bitumen coating until I can do the others. mercedade, N Dentressangle, Dyslexic Viking and 2 others 5
sutty2006 Posted March 29, 2024 Author Posted March 29, 2024 Today I’ve collected some of my tools from work. I’ve left, start a new job on Tuesday. This wouldn’t have gone in the Audi. The rest will need to go in a van. N Dentressangle, Dyslexic Viking, mercedade and 6 others 9
N Dentressangle Posted March 29, 2024 Posted March 29, 2024 A Disco is just a useful thing to have. Carries all sorts of shite, any size, any weight. And if it's too big for inside, it'll tow a stupidly large and heavy trailer. Saabnut and sutty2006 2
Jenson Velcro Posted March 31, 2024 Posted March 31, 2024 Good luck with the new job. Are you going to do similar work or something new?
sutty2006 Posted April 20, 2024 Author Posted April 20, 2024 I’ve not used the disco since last weekend. Today went to get two new tyres for the rear. Then went up to my unit to pick some stuff up. From my unit I went to a Landrover parts shop about 10 miles away to pick up another ball joint for the front. While I was discussing the impending doom of owning a Landrover with the shop owner, I noticed a dark pool under the rear of the disco. Knowing full well that MANY landrovers park here, it must be someone else from earlier. Only to my disappointment as I walked back to it that the rear of the disco was covered top to bottom in fuel. And it was pouring out with the engine running. Pipe must have ruptured on my way from my unit to the shop, as it was dry when I left. unfortunate? Yes. Rang the AA, who turned up 15 minutes later. The shop owner, fluent in discovery ailments said it’ll be the fuel pipe from tank to filter. And sold me the pipe. AA man didn’t want to drop the tank in the car park, which is FULL, so a bloke turned up and offered to replace it in the workshop on Sunday. Took the big yellow taxi home. High Jetter, Dyslexic Viking, Coprolalia and 3 others 6
sutty2006 Posted April 20, 2024 Author Posted April 20, 2024 And last week I had a puncture Coprolalia, Dyslexic Viking and grogee 3
sutty2006 Posted April 26, 2024 Author Posted April 26, 2024 Finally, it’s now unbroken. id have never changed this ball joint on my driveway. Took it to a mate who owns his own garage who had to borrow a porta-press to get the old ball joint out. jobs remaining on the list.. - rear trailing arm bushes (to chassis) - engine service - transmission service - diff oil services. hopefully no other jobs crop up in the meantime Tickman, Dyslexic Viking and Matty 3
grogee Posted April 26, 2024 Posted April 26, 2024 33 minutes ago, sutty2006 said: Finally, it’s now unbroken. id have never changed this ball joint on my driveway. Took it to a mate who owns his own garage who had to borrow a porta-press to get the old ball joint out. jobs remaining on the list.. - rear trailing arm bushes (to chassis) - engine service - transmission service - diff oil services. hopefully no other jobs crop up in the meantime Good work. I'll be buying shares in LR parts suppliers. And you're the reason petrol prices are up - you'll need about 15 litres of oil for that lot!
N Dentressangle Posted April 26, 2024 Posted April 26, 2024 I occasionally have bad thoughts about upgrading my D1 300TDI for a more civilised D2 or D3. And then I'm reminded of why my basic old tractor is so appealing, esp compared to the ruinously awful D3 😉 Still, balljoints and fuel pipes aren't too bad - keep fixing! 👍 Saabnut 1
sutty2006 Posted April 26, 2024 Author Posted April 26, 2024 Yeah it’s all just running costs now. I can’t afford anything better now. And for some reason these D2s are holding better money than newer D3s.
sutty2006 Posted April 27, 2024 Author Posted April 27, 2024 hit a milestone yesterday. It’s taken millions of pounds to get there but it’s done now. Hopefully get it to 200k without too much pain and heartache andy18s, Tickman, Coprolalia and 1 other 4
EyesWeldedShut Posted April 27, 2024 Posted April 27, 2024 5 minutes ago, sutty2006 said: hit a milestone yesterday. It’s taken millions of pounds to get there but it’s done now. Hopefully get it to 200k without too much pain and heartache Optimist: he who brims his Discovery-2 fuel tank secure in the knowledge that........ GrumpiusMaximus, mercedade, High Jetter and 2 others 5
EyesWeldedShut Posted April 27, 2024 Posted April 27, 2024 On 26/04/2024 at 06:53, grogee said: Good work. I'll be buying shares in LR parts suppliers. And you're the reason petrol prices are up - you'll need about 15 litres of oil for that lot! I can highly recommend* a certain LR Parts Supplier. Judging from our recent M6 South in Lancashire experience they are now fitting their own stock into their own lorries. (Picture taken from a Canberra) grogee, mercedade, catsinthewelder and 4 others 7
Agila Posted April 27, 2024 Posted April 27, 2024 11 minutes ago, EyesWeldedShut said: I can highly recommend* a certain LR Parts Supplier. Judging from our recent M6 South in Lancashire experience they are now fitting their own stock into their own lorries. (Picture taken from a Canberra) Even carrying Land Rover parts make vehicles break down🤣 rm36house, sutty2006, grogee and 2 others 5
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