ajohno
Well-known member
Coming along nicely mate.









Nice work, there's a few hours in all of that.
Yeh sometimes when you start pealing stuff back you find things you didn't want to see, one of the things that scares us about our place![]()
























All that home reno work looks great. I take it the primary client is happy with it?










Starting to run out of spare steel so the tailgate is much more beefy than i planned 









Oh mate, that's no good about the Amarok, especially since you have to deal with insurance companies.Now the fun of dealing with insurance companies
Oh mate, that's no good about the Amarok, especially since you have to deal with insurance companies.
If you look back over the last few months of my thread you'll see that both I and my daughter have had to have this fun recently. While both claims ended up satisfactorily, the process of getting to the end was tedious to say the least - slow to act, poor/contradictory/belated/absent communication, trying to fob my daughter off with an inferior replacement vehicle, and various other shortcomings.
We are both with a company with a four letter name, first two letters being the same, and usually pronounced like a girl's name starting with A. This outfit used to have a major point of difference in that a human being answered the phone right at the start. Since they were taken over by basically a Qld based bank they no longer have this point of difference so dealing with the abovementioned crappy communication meant having to set aside a couple of hours to wait to talk to someone, during which they play really annoying music in the hope it'll drive you to hang up.
So good luck.












Matty
As part of my (now part time) responsibilities where I work I look after insurance issues and liaisons. In a fleet with over 1400 registrations, and 24 depots around Australia, I can assure you that there is a LOT of LIAISON with insurers. And I can tell you - never settle for first offers. Do your own comps, look at the market and fire back with what you find. I have had vehicles (I'm talking about prime movers here) moved several thousand kilometres from one repairer to another to get work done properly.....
And - I always get better accepted valuations after a fight.
So don't settle for less than you want.
Lyndon
























An open centre rotates half what a LSD or other locker does. I would have done this test the other way round - turn the drum two full revolutions and count the pinion rotations. Depending on which of the ratios you mention above, the pinion should rotate about 3 3/4, a whisker over 4 or about 4 1/3. With a locker you just do one rotation of the drum.Few days later a stunning deal on a new diff/axle came up on marketplace at a local wrecker and i had it purchased and delivered in a few days.
I checked the stickers/part numbers as much as i could but hard to know with VW parts what you're looking at....
Amarok diffs come in 3 common ratios 3.7, 4.1, 4.3
After getting it home it seemed like the diff i purchased was a really low ratio of ~2:1 when turning the input shaft and counting the brake drum rotation.
I was thoroughly confused for a day about this before i decided to whip the covers off. Teeth count matched between old and new so i slapped it into the car and all seemed ok!
I'm still greatly confused how the open center was multiplying the drive ratio somehow?!
An open centre rotates half what a LSD or other locker does. I would have done this test the other way round - turn the drum two full revolutions and count the pinion rotations. Depending on which of the ratios you mention above, the pinion should rotate about 3 3/4, a whisker over 4 or about 4 1/3. With a locker you just do one rotation of the drum.
You don't want to mistake me for a new fangled Mustang man, they don't interest me and I don't know much about them. Most of the guys in the club who have them aren't really car guys in terms of working on them and modifying them, just take them to the dealer for service. I can think of a couple of exceptions so I'll try to remember to ask at the next meeting or event. Craig Dean, who runs this outfit will probably have an educated view on this.yeah so i was keeping one drum still and rotating the pinion, no lockers engaged (it's electronic activated)
Where things get tricky was the original diff was 3.7 turns as expected! but the new one always seemed to produce half that.
I'm not sure how but possible the bent axle tubes caused one side to have more friction on the old diff :S i dunno
Spider gears on the inside were 9 and 13 teeth, crown wheel 37, pinion 10
Speaking of diffs and since you're a mustang man do you hear about many newer mustangs running friction modifier or not in their 8.8's?
I noticed the E36 ford 8.8 diff seems to be spinning only one side. Not sure if it's due to the clutches being worn, i haven't added friction modifier yet or i bought an open diff and didn't realise![]()
An incredible level of consistent, well structured diagrams i think anyone can appreciate.
My Grandfather worked for 44 years as an Engineer for a mining company and was involved in the design of the Gladstone QAL (Queensland Alumina Refinery) and Boyne Smelter. Today said mining company after many name changes is now known as Rio Tinto.



















































Of course you're building your own E bike! How come you got all the skills?


Flogged the hell out of that bike




