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BZG|Bling wrote:Are we talking spinning the wheels driving up a steep gravel drive or just gravel in general?
Not all driveways have gravel alot have just clay specially Golden homes and as far as weight goes i do carry alot every day but not overloaded,as the tare weight is supposedly 1200 kg. A brand new factory diff as quoted by toyota $8000 and a brand new lsd diff $2500, how that works is beyond me.Mr Revhead wrote:Toyota are normally pretty good on warrantys on new vehicles.
It sounds as if after inspection they have found evidence of shock loadings, as mentioned above.
however you drove it for a month with a horrible noise.... Thats probably enough to void the warranty.
These diffs are not know for weakness.... And they are the same internals as have been in the hiaces and hiluxs since about 1989.
If you can get it done under warranty, get it upgraded to an LSD as it sounds like you need one. you will have to pay the difference.
Iv driven heaps of these things, and they really do need an LSD if you are even looking at a gravel road, hell even hills with corners need an lsd.
99gtt wrote:as far as weight goes i do carry alot every day but not overloaded,as the tare weight is supposedly 1200 kg.
rolla_fxgt wrote:So Revhead your saying, that its the gravel that's causing it?
If so, wouldn't Toyota NZ be opening themselves up to a huge Com Com investigation and fine for breach of the Fair Trading Act, under goods not being fit for the purpose?
Gravel roads are fairly common in NZ, and most tradesmen would be going on them fairly frequently, sometimes with heavy loads, sometimes fairly light, which could lead to spinning & gripping of the wheels intermittently.
If this is the case it would seem like TNZ are under specing the Hiaces for the NZ market by not fitting LSD's
Mr Revhead wrote:rolla_fxgt wrote:So Revhead your saying, that its the gravel that's causing it?
If so, wouldn't Toyota NZ be opening themselves up to a huge Com Com investigation and fine for breach of the Fair Trading Act, under goods not being fit for the purpose?
Gravel roads are fairly common in NZ, and most tradesmen would be going on them fairly frequently, sometimes with heavy loads, sometimes fairly light, which could lead to spinning & gripping of the wheels intermittently.
If this is the case it would seem like TNZ are under specing the Hiaces for the NZ market by not fitting LSD's
no, read what I said again
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