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8th July 2013, 06:42 PM
#41
After reading this thread, I would be prepared to have a go. Tony- you are a genius. Thank you
At the end of the day, all you have is yourself and all you need is your friends (and in our case our Patrol)
2006 GUI1 4.2TDi Coil Cab "almost" standard
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8th July 2013 06:42 PM
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17th July 2013, 04:35 PM
#42
Patrol God
G,day, all, this thread with pics is magnificent. I will be having a crack at my CV and axle seals as soon as my parts arrive as I have grease dribbling down the brake shield. I have two questions.
1. The hub seal definitely fits in with the two lips toward the CV, and the one big lip into the hub, doesn't it?
2. I have innox Extreme pressure M8 grease which is for farm machinery, marine, CV joints and brake wheel bearings. (Bloody expensive, but as water crossings are on the cards, I think it will be worth it). Has anyone had any dramas with it?
Last edited by mudnut; 19th July 2013 at 12:23 AM.
My advice is: not to follow my advice.
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18th July 2013, 07:43 AM
#43
Originally Posted by
mudnut
G,day, all. I will be having a crack at my CV and axle seals as soon as my parts arrive as I have grease dribbling down the brake shield. I have two questions.
1. The hub seal definitely fits in with the two lips toward the CV, and the one big lip into the hub, doesn't it?
2. I have innox Extreme pressure M8 grease which is for farm machinery, marine, CV joints and brake wheel bearings. (Bloody expensive, but as water crossings are on the cards, I think it will be worth it). Has anyone had any dramas with it?
1. Big lip on the hub seal faces the CV.
2. That grease is high temperature rated so should be fine to use.
T.
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to YNOT For This Useful Post:
BigRAWesty (18th July 2013), mudnut (19th July 2013)
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18th July 2013, 08:19 AM
#44
Patrol God
Yea when I removed mine it was big lip (seal end, flat side) towards the cv.
Look at it like this. You use seals to keep oil grease etc in. The oil is thinner than grease so you want to keep the oil in the diff, so you place the seal as if the diff was a bearing, not the cc. Hope that makes sense..
Sent from my C6603 using Motorculture mobile app
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The Following User Says Thank You to BigRAWesty For This Useful Post:
tryan277 (20th June 2016)
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18th July 2013, 08:30 AM
#45
Originally Posted by
Westy's Accessories
Yea when I removed mine it was big lip (seal end, flat side) towards the cv.
Look at it like this. You use seals to keep oil grease etc in. The oil is thinner than grease so you want to keep the oil in the diff, so you place the seal as if the diff was a bearing, not the cc. Hope that makes sense..
Thanks K I think I know what you're saying and you are correct, though in this case I think you are referring to the axle seal rather than the hub seal from the previous post.
T.
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The Following User Says Thank You to YNOT For This Useful Post:
BigRAWesty (19th July 2013)
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19th July 2013, 12:19 AM
#46
Patrol God
I asked because I saw an experienced bloke fit a hub seal with the two smaller lips onto the vertical face of the spindle. Which is opposite to what was on my Old Trol when I took it apart to repack the bearings. The one big lip was rubbing on the spindle ,so I replaced it as such. so I'm still confused.
My advice is: not to follow my advice.
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19th July 2013, 12:40 AM
#47
Moderator
Originally Posted by
mudnut
I asked because I saw an experienced bloke fit a hub seal with the two smaller lips onto the vertical face of the spindle. Which is opposite to what was on my Old Trol when I took it apart to repack the bearings. The one big lip was rubbing on the spindle ,so I replaced it as such. so I'm still confused.
Hi Mudnut,
Do you mean this seal mate?
in the pic below you can see where is has rubbed on the CV. Note that it is shaped to fit straight onto the spindle and the "Lip" is facing towards the CV to create the seal when spinning.
In the pic above you can also see the inner axle seal still in position in the diff housing. that is the bugger that most often fails and is the cause of the weeping of Diff Oil down teh inside of the inner stone guard. it is a bugger that the whole thing comes apart to get to it.
Last edited by MudRunnerTD; 19th July 2013 at 12:42 AM.
Its a Nissan! =====> Its a Keeper!! ....... Got a TD42 in it BONUS!!
....... I'm a lucky bugger! I've got 2 of em!
Check out my Toy -->
MudRunnerTD's GQ From the Ground Up
Originally Posted by
Rogue Dung Beetle
Wish it was Nissan though, Toyotas just can't keep up with the Pootrol pace.
The only good thing about an 80 series is..... the front end?? Wrong!!, the Engine?? Wrong!! the Full Time 4WD system?? Wrong!! Its the NissanPatrol.com.au stubby holder fitted over the transfer lever.
WARNING: Towballs used for recoveries can, and do kill people and damage property.
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19th July 2013, 12:54 AM
#48
Patrol God
The one actually in the hub. MR.
My advice is: not to follow my advice.
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19th July 2013, 01:34 AM
#49
Moderator
Originally Posted by
mudnut
The one actually in the hub. MR.
which seal in this diagram Mudnut?
Its a Nissan! =====> Its a Keeper!! ....... Got a TD42 in it BONUS!!
....... I'm a lucky bugger! I've got 2 of em!
Check out my Toy -->
MudRunnerTD's GQ From the Ground Up
Originally Posted by
Rogue Dung Beetle
Wish it was Nissan though, Toyotas just can't keep up with the Pootrol pace.
The only good thing about an 80 series is..... the front end?? Wrong!!, the Engine?? Wrong!! the Full Time 4WD system?? Wrong!! Its the NissanPatrol.com.au stubby holder fitted over the transfer lever.
WARNING: Towballs used for recoveries can, and do kill people and damage property.
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The Following User Says Thank You to MudRunnerTD For This Useful Post:
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19th July 2013, 01:48 AM
#50
Patrol God
40227-C8200. Inner wheel bearing grease seal. The one that rotates with the hub, mate.
My advice is: not to follow my advice.
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