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Terminator Alpine


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Thread: Old Nissan Safari query

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by Grey Kiwi View Post
    Well, that escalated quickly.
    The inboard bearings inner race had heat welded itself to that stub axle housing.
    With a good weld bead run around the race to heat it and a lot of pressure from an hydraulic press the race was finally removed.
    But no use...the stub axle is badly damaged. The oil seal area has also been ground down from the hub sitting down on it (yes...the owner had heard strange noises before and had tried to just shove in some grease without actually taking the hub apart. No such thing as a quick fix!).
    It's not pretty, and probably has damaged the hub too.
    So...some parts needed.
    Anyone wrecking one of these, or know of a likely source of parts (1998 Nissan Safari)?
    Thanks.
    Attachment 267333
    I slightly worn my sub axel 600ks(front left)Y62.Garage glued the new bearing inner on axel with some sort of engineering glue.Been on a year,no problem yet.New sub axel from Auckalnd Nissen ($1350),that was a year ago.

  2. #17
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    Probably a green loctite retaining compound or equivalent? Bit of a harsh way to go but if it works... On the other hand at $1350 a piece bloody near worth weld repairing and machining back down!

  3. #18
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    Probably bearing retainer. Wurth makes it.
    XR500 likes this.

  4. #19
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    Used it in trailer hubs before

  5. #20
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    Just check front wheeling bearings for movement last week.Front left needed a little swigg up,3mm of movenment +or -.First time since glue job 12 months ago,15k.Pretty good I thort.
    blip likes this.

  6. #21
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    Iv been watching the oil since last oil change.Used 1/2litre of oil in 10000ks.Happy its only used that amount too for a 610k engine.
    XR500 and blip like this.

  7. #22
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    Keep an eye on your bearings. If the stub axle is worn youll be taking the play out by preloading the bearings a bit too much but it will work.
    may be sarcastic may be a bad joke

  8. #23
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    Bit late, hope you got it sorted.
    I've replaced one as well un my GU wagon.

    couple of variations & they do sell them here in NZ.
    https://www.4wdbits.co.nz/ProductDet...productID=6631

    https://www.4wdbits.co.nz/ProductDet...productID=6630

  9. #24
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    Yep - side track option but if you don't mind getting out and engaging your hubs the manual spindle at $233+ will do the job if you also swap out the auto hubs. Most 4wd types do this as the standard Nissan auto hubs are bastards of things as if you go into reverse for a short section (rocking the vehicle) the auto hubs tend to unlock and if you can't rotate forwards enough to get them to re-lock in the forwards direction you can bury the rear end or end up parked and need a recovery or a winch. Or, if you're particularly lucky you can use the special locking slim wrench doohickey and manually lock them back up (if you can get to the center of your wheel!).

    The other failure mode for the auto hubs is they try and engage when you are going forwards at 50Km/H which can get interesting. It's a hell of a bang at the very least. I had a set of auto hubs here for a long time after I replaced mine with manual type hubs, almost ripped the guts clean out of the right side one doing this. A guy heard me whining about them locking up like that, and made me an offer so he could replace one of his that did the same. Couldn't refuse, to be fair - I would have just fitted manuals but each to their own.
    rupert likes this.

  10. #25
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    Got rid of auto hubs yrs ago,real bitch of things if you think they are working when crossing a river.You start get bogged down,no 4x4.THanks God for rear diff lock.
    m101a1 and XR500 like this.

  11. #26
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    Still got auto hubs on the 'good' GU. I have been told its not to go off road, so they will do for the mean time.

    The old GU has AVM's I fitted 8 years ago. Have been faultless till a couple of weeks ago down on the south Island climbing out of Omarama on steep shale and I swear I heard them jump a spline every now and then. Bugger. will have to take off and inspect before the next trip south in 5 weeks time.

    Its good to see you can buy reasonable cost stub axles.

    My Kubota tractor has one front wheel bearing held in place with that black Wurth goo. That and a million centre punch dots Bloody brilliant stuff. Was able to check its concentricty with a dti before the wurth goo went hard, so that was great peace of mind for something that will not want to come apart easily

  12. #27
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    As mentioned the fully auto hubs are absolute shyte, the other type which are manual/auto are the best in all seriousness.

    The auto side is pretty adequate for general stuff, fundraiser, light river or club grade 2 use. For serious grade 5 shyte then just use your wheel brace or tyre iron to switch the hub from auto to manual....they rarely fail or let you down.
    I've got genuine Patrol manual hubs on my Safari, I love em...but I've got a couple pairs of mint factory auto/manual hubs tucked away.

    The only time I EVER had trouble with the above hubs was winter to summer, during summer i'd run factory recommended fluid in the transfer case, during winter when that oil was thicker due to the cold temperatures here in the South Is...when I left for work in the morning and the fluid being thicker - the auto hubs tended to engage, this only occurred until things warmed up. So to prevent that I'd run auto transmission fluid in the transfer case. It worked perfectly and incase anyone thinks it a bit weird then Google it or look on the Patrol4x4 aussie forum.
    XR500 likes this.

  13. #28
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    Auto trans fluid in transfer case been working fine for me in the last 19yrs.

  14. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by Twodiffs View Post
    As mentioned the fully auto hubs are absolute shyte, the other type which are manual/auto are the best in all seriousness.

    The auto side is pretty adequate for general stuff, fundraiser, light river or club grade 2 use. For serious grade 5 shyte then just use your wheel brace or tyre iron to switch the hub from auto to manual....they rarely fail or let you down.
    I've got genuine Patrol manual hubs on my Safari, I love em...but I've got a couple pairs of mint factory auto/manual hubs tucked away.

    The only time I EVER had trouble with the above hubs was winter to summer, during summer i'd run factory recommended fluid in the transfer case, during winter when that oil was thicker due to the cold temperatures here in the South Is...when I left for work in the morning and the fluid being thicker - the auto hubs tended to engage, this only occurred until things warmed up. So to prevent that I'd run auto transmission fluid in the transfer case. It worked perfectly and incase anyone thinks it a bit weird then Google it or look on the Patrol4x4 aussie forum.
    Good to know. Mine is the factory auto/manual variety that takes the wheel brace to change from one setting to the other.

  15. #30
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    Quote Originally Posted by XR500 View Post
    Good to know. Mine is the factory auto/manual variety that takes the wheel brace to change from one setting to the other.
    They are OK, although this was the type that did the 50Km/H 'self-engage' on me driving around town... I replaced with fully manual and no more problems with the bloody things trying to engage at 50Km/H while in 2wd mode. The cheaper auto type (like what you normally get on the early xtrails and the like) are not recommended, but the auto with what they call the emergency manual override option are also not entirely bullet proof.

    To be fair, when I was doing a lot of 4wd work I just used to leave them engaged and let the front diff sort it out. Didn't notice any issue with either steering handling or fuel economy from it, and usually when I was working the rest of the crew parked on your arse so you couldn't reverse to unlock the auto hubs anyway so no real change there.

    I used to just run the same LSD diff oil in front and rear, as it meant 1 bottle rather than two using half in each end. I think I was able to get a 6L which just did it if I recall, never had any issues with the hubs as I was running manuals anyway. I expect that the issue is due to the axles 'dragging' on the oil viscosity, but no real issue I can see unless you get a handling issue from it???

 

 

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