LSD?
Author
Discussion

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Saturday 26th March 2011
quotequote all
Am I correct in thinking that if I put the car on axle stands out of gear and rotate a rear wheel, if the other rotates the same way then my car has a working LSD?

When in gear the wheels turn in opposite directions. Car is a 92 1.6 Eunos.

Also I've asked in a few places about the oil thats in the diff and got no answers - it's bright purple, opaque and quite thick - anyone know what it is?

Mr MXT

7,774 posts

307 months

Saturday 26th March 2011
quotequote all
I can only ever remember the "fun" test. Revs up and dump the clutch.

2 black lines, LSD. 1 black line, no LSD.

snotrag

15,508 posts

235 months

Saturday 26th March 2011
quotequote all
Yes thst would generally signify some type of locking diff.

However mx5s usually use Torsen type (TORque SENsing) diffs - which will not provide any lock up if one wheel is free to rotate. So this test won't work!

Easiest way to be 90% sure is by spec.

Rest of it by feel. Stick one wheel on grass and one on Tarmac and boot it to test.

GravelBen

16,356 posts

254 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
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A 92 1.6 would be a viscous rather than than Torsen, which don't limit that much slip and most will have reverted to open by that age anyway.

skinny

5,269 posts

259 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
JimSuperSix said:
Am I correct in thinking that if I put the car on axle stands out of gear and rotate a rear wheel, if the other rotates the same way then my car has a working LSD?

When in gear the wheels turn in opposite directions. Car is a 92 1.6 Eunos.

Also I've asked in a few places about the oil thats in the diff and got no answers - it's bright purple, opaque and quite thick - anyone know what it is?
is it stiff to turn a wheel when you're in gear? if so you've got a viscous LSD - if it's easy then you've got an open diff.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
Yes the wheel was pretty hard to turn when in gear.

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
So, anyone know what the bright purple stuff in the diff is?

The Game

2,324 posts

205 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
Royal purple oil

anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
Cool, I'll pop into Halfords and ask for some of that then smile

The Game

2,324 posts

205 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
I've never seen it in Halfords

http://www.royalpurple.co.uk/where-to-buy.html


anonymous-user

Original Poster:

78 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
I thought you were joking biggrin

Is it acutally purple? Because the stuff in my diff looks exactly like this (and not cause its in a yellow tray as they have, just that colour bright opaque purple dripping out of the diff filler) :
http://www.flickr.com/photos/72179605@N00/85018753...


Edited by anonymous-user on Sunday 27th March 22:35

MX-5 Lazza

7,954 posts

243 months

Sunday 27th March 2011
quotequote all
Someone I work with tried it in his Celica GT4 after being told it was the bees knees. Wasn't impressed. It's a true full synthetic rather than the usual mineral based synthetics you usually get.

Richyvrlimited

1,870 posts

187 months

Monday 28th March 2011
quotequote all
snotrag said:
Yes thst would generally signify some type of locking diff.

However mx5s usually use Torsen type (TORque SENsing) diffs - which will not provide any lock up if one wheel is free to rotate. So this test won't work!

Easiest way to be 90% sure is by spec.

Rest of it by feel. Stick one wheel on grass and one on Tarmac and boot it to test.
Tho if you have a Tochi-Fuji diff (Mk2.5 6 speed) which is a Torsen with a preloaded clutchpack this test does work wink.