Brumby rear wheel drive
Brumby rear wheel drive
Just wondering of some possible ways to make my Brumby a rwd?
Cheers
Cheers
- thunder039
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except this would only make it 50% drive.purp wrote:Take out the front drive shafts and put it in 4WD?
there is a way of doing it, not sure have you tried searching the forum?
2004 subaru forester -gone
1999 subaru forester- no more
1989 subaru brumby- sold!
2008 zook jimny -sold!
2003 mitsubishi pajero - missus car
2013 nissan d22- set up for long distant touring
1999 subaru forester- no more

1989 subaru brumby- sold!
2008 zook jimny -sold!
2003 mitsubishi pajero - missus car
2013 nissan d22- set up for long distant touring
- thunder039
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- Location: victoria AUS
but wouldnt you only have 50% of the power to the wheels?chridk wrote:I drove my brumby with no front shafts in 4WD for 5 years with no drama's

2004 subaru forester -gone
1999 subaru forester- no more
1989 subaru brumby- sold!
2008 zook jimny -sold!
2003 mitsubishi pajero - missus car
2013 nissan d22- set up for long distant touring
1999 subaru forester- no more

1989 subaru brumby- sold!
2008 zook jimny -sold!
2003 mitsubishi pajero - missus car
2013 nissan d22- set up for long distant touring
The centre diff is locked solid, 50% of power to front and 50% to back. But that is the theoretical split if all wheels have he same traction. If, for example the front two wheels were on ice and the rear on tar and you floored the accelerator, the front would spin, but the rear would grip and move the car. If the centre was a totally open diff, like the front and rear, then the front would spin and the rear would grip, then all the power would go to the front and the car wouldn't move.thunder039 wrote:but wouldnt you only have 50% of the power to the wheels?
Likewise, if the centre diff were and open diff and the front drive shafts were removed (or even just one of them) the car wouldn't move...
So with the drive shafts removed, a tiny fraction of the power is being used to spin the stubs on the gearbox and the diff, but all the rest is going in to the rear of the drive train.
no, they are normally fwd and you dont lose 50% then, no different to being in 4wd without a front drive shaft. its a direct power transfer front and rear wheels, ie front and rear are locked together in 4wd normally. the diffs are open, not the box.thunder039 wrote:but wouldnt you only have 50% of the power to the wheels?
you will need to dismantle the outer cv joint and leave splined shaft in and bolted up (the bit the castle nut bolts on to). otherwise you might find your front wheels going a different direction to the rest of your car...
- thunder039
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Trust what this guy says.MTB92 wrote:its not open. it is direct transfer. no slip front or rear, which is why you shouldn't run 4wd on the bitumen in the old subies.
in other words there is no centre diff. its either engaged or not engaged.
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my07 Outback
my13 Hyundai i45(shhhh)
my02 Gen3 Liberty limited ed.
previously
L-series wagon, LSD, EJ20turbo, 29in tyres, 'wanky wagon'
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my13 Hyundai i45(shhhh)
my02 Gen3 Liberty limited ed.
previously
L-series wagon, LSD, EJ20turbo, 29in tyres, 'wanky wagon'
2000 gen3 outback, lifted, otherwise stock.
- TOONGA
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1 Find 2 flogged out outer CV joints to suit a brumby (outer only) ensure they have good thread for the castle nut
2.remove your complete shafts and store for a later date
3 insert outer CV's
4 put the hi lo lever into high range (not low as this defeats the purpose)
5 drive your rear wheel drive brumby
(6 replace rear diff after around 6 months of solid driving)
TOONGA
2.remove your complete shafts and store for a later date
3 insert outer CV's
4 put the hi lo lever into high range (not low as this defeats the purpose)
5 drive your rear wheel drive brumby
(6 replace rear diff after around 6 months of solid driving)
TOONGA
LOL . Love it !stenno wrote:
Step 6 do skids.
"THE BRUMBY ! , Your not taking the Brumby I just dry cleaned the mud flaps."
Current
00 Outback with class, SOHC EJ25 auto 240,068ks
"B1" 90 Brumby with character 271,800K EA81 (But soon 5speed,103,000k EJ202)
"B2" wrecked and crushed
"B3" 89 Bush Bashing Brumby (BeeRumBee) Kept a Bucca
"B4" 89 Black Brumby (wam balam ) Kept at Kempsey
"B5" 92 Brumby (sold it)
"B6" 88 Beige Brumby
"W1" 83 wagon 308,000 AC and alot of rust repairs. (Wanda)
Brumby Trailer (Sulky)
LUV THAT BRUM !
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[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Current
00 Outback with class, SOHC EJ25 auto 240,068ks
"B1" 90 Brumby with character 271,800K EA81 (But soon 5speed,103,000k EJ202)
"B2" wrecked and crushed
"B3" 89 Bush Bashing Brumby (BeeRumBee) Kept a Bucca
"B4" 89 Black Brumby (wam balam ) Kept at Kempsey
"B5" 92 Brumby (sold it)
"B6" 88 Beige Brumby
"W1" 83 wagon 308,000 AC and alot of rust repairs. (Wanda)
Brumby Trailer (Sulky)
LUV THAT BRUM !
RevMax Hobbies
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
no, then you will have a rear wheel drive brumby.ausbrumby wrote:Do your pretty much saying if I run it in 4wd without front shafts, I will break stuff?
if you run it 4wd WITH front drive shafts, on the bitumen in the dry for a decent length of time you could break something.
if you want rwd, just follow the instructions above!

just to make sure you understand it; you must leave (or replace) the part of the shaft that goes through the wheel with the castle nut on it through the front hub. that is what holds your front hubs, disk and wheel on. you do this by taking apart the outer cv.
- thunder039
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- El_Freddo
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Depends on how you drive it. That's basically what it comes down to. If you flog it but keep up with checks on the rear end and replacing/reinforcing anything that's worn you should be right. Should being the operative word!ausbrumby wrote:Do your pretty much saying if I run it in 4wd without front shafts, I will break stuff?
I'd also double your diff hanger, the "moustache" bar. Get another one, cut the ends off and stitch weld it top and bottom to your current one (removed from the vehicle for the work).
Cheers
Bennie