G'day John
"Delightfully British" huh? Never seen it put that way before, or as politely.....
Technically, it is oh so logical, but practicality?
But why were they suddenly so enamored of a universal TB I wonder, especially one that has to be maintained?
I have not heard of any other TB installation that requires periodic maintenance, let alone aggressive greasing.
Regards
Doug
"Delightfully British" huh? Never seen it put that way before, or as politely.....
Technically, it is oh so logical, but practicality?
But why were they suddenly so enamored of a universal TB I wonder, especially one that has to be maintained?
I have not heard of any other TB installation that requires periodic maintenance, let alone aggressive greasing.
Regards
Doug
We believe grease is cheap whereas steel is expensive so we grease everything often. Road duty is not hard on the driveline. Rough terrain is. So asking these machines to traverse humps which flex the T.B's to their max is what causes the damage. Something has to give and these T.B's can be upwards of 50 years in service.
I don't know about 3x number of parts but let's say the FV432 is 'delightfully British' and has several 'elegant' engineering solutions on-board. (The designers of the power-pack took inspiration from Sir Alec Issigonis of Mini car fame and crammed a lot into a small space. The Rolls-Royce K60 diesel has 6 cylinders and 12 pistons with 2 crankshafts... )
The T.B's are "settable" so they can allow for weight variations on the whole range of the FV430 family thus using the same bars, for the same side, for the whole range. You need the correct setting gauge for the seperate vehicles and in some cases there are varaitions along the stations to allow for localised weight such as the crane on the 434 or the generators on the radio relay variant.
I'm John.