morrisdl
Adventurer
I was un/fortunate enough to follow a LR3 HD around for a day and saw how significant the little differences actually are. I did more difficult trails that day than I have ever done and got stuck on a rock climb and needed a winching (the HD did not). The HD LR3 was slow and steady, where mine always needed a little more throttle and drama to get though the same things. The HD would walk over an obstacle where the traction control (TC) needed a little wheel spin to kick in. Before that day, I was perfectly happy with the capabilities of the TC. I have always kept up with the Defenders and Jeep Rubi in our groups. The locker should just makes it a little easier on the truck, tires, and trails.
ARB sells two models: RD218 for the rear axle and the RD217 for the front. My Rear ARB locker came with new TIMKEN bearings. There is a warning on the ARB store that not all kits do. I know Lucky8 sells the bearings too (if needed). Thankfully I did not attempt this install. It was completed by Corey Rice @ Land Rover Knoxville, TN. His skills are probably more than what is required for this install, but this guy is one of the few that has rebuilt LR3 diffs. He is also one of the organizers for the Fall Uwharrie Land Rover event and an amazing mechanic. He worked late into the evening to make sure my truck was ready for me.
I put the compressor switch in the touchscreen relay and the physical rear Locker switch behind the parking brake. This combination worked out well to prevent accidental activation AND ease of use on the trail:
Install specifics: Used factory 75-90 synthetic oil. Change again after 500-1000 mile break-in period. Backlash was .015 and preloaded was rotational torque of 1.5NM. The ARB Kit did not come with a new pinion depth/preload crush sleeve. The LR tech luckily had a new one left over from a previous diff rebuild.
Pricey mod, but getting stuck sucks!
ARB sells two models: RD218 for the rear axle and the RD217 for the front. My Rear ARB locker came with new TIMKEN bearings. There is a warning on the ARB store that not all kits do. I know Lucky8 sells the bearings too (if needed). Thankfully I did not attempt this install. It was completed by Corey Rice @ Land Rover Knoxville, TN. His skills are probably more than what is required for this install, but this guy is one of the few that has rebuilt LR3 diffs. He is also one of the organizers for the Fall Uwharrie Land Rover event and an amazing mechanic. He worked late into the evening to make sure my truck was ready for me.
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I put the compressor switch in the touchscreen relay and the physical rear Locker switch behind the parking brake. This combination worked out well to prevent accidental activation AND ease of use on the trail:
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Install specifics: Used factory 75-90 synthetic oil. Change again after 500-1000 mile break-in period. Backlash was .015 and preloaded was rotational torque of 1.5NM. The ARB Kit did not come with a new pinion depth/preload crush sleeve. The LR tech luckily had a new one left over from a previous diff rebuild.
Pricey mod, but getting stuck sucks!