A new chapter about my VC
Moderators: User administrators, Moderators
double checked on a grassy slope this morning, it is buggerd!!
dont think all the weight was on the bars, some was on the front wheels they just wern't helping, and the back were touching a bit as it drove off in the end.
Luckily I've got a spare VC in stock.
I guess I need to take the front diff right out to swap it over? or can I replace it in situ?
I'll keep chucking money at it till it's sorted don't worry I'm not giving up...... Any one want to buy Rallye Golf?
dont think all the weight was on the bars, some was on the front wheels they just wern't helping, and the back were touching a bit as it drove off in the end.
Luckily I've got a spare VC in stock.
I guess I need to take the front diff right out to swap it over? or can I replace it in situ?
I'll keep chucking money at it till it's sorted don't worry I'm not giving up...... Any one want to buy Rallye Golf?
Syncro 16" doka 2.1i
Can change it in situ or by removing diff.. either.
Loosen diff refill plug first! Drain diff... Driveshafts and rear mounts have to be disconnected, lossen front mounts, angled down and slightly sideways, remove rear cover, don't lose the ring that goes between VC and rear bearing (grease to hold when replaced) use a good liquid sealant (I used orange anaerobic jointing compund), check mounting rubbers for delamming, ensure those long through bolts are put back with all washers in the right place, etc.
Refill diff (2.5 litres? check first)
Think there is a blow-by-blow pictorial artcile on web (american)... possibly linked in our Wiki
Loosen diff refill plug first! Drain diff... Driveshafts and rear mounts have to be disconnected, lossen front mounts, angled down and slightly sideways, remove rear cover, don't lose the ring that goes between VC and rear bearing (grease to hold when replaced) use a good liquid sealant (I used orange anaerobic jointing compund), check mounting rubbers for delamming, ensure those long through bolts are put back with all washers in the right place, etc.
Refill diff (2.5 litres? check first)
Think there is a blow-by-blow pictorial artcile on web (american)... possibly linked in our Wiki
The 80-90 Tech Wikipedia Your 1st port of call

Syncro Kastenwagen / 16" Kombi Camper
Syncronaut No. 1
Thanks again for your advice, looks like I've got a job this weekend.
I've liberated the one from my spare front diff, came out dead easy on the bench!
What sealent was my next question but youve answered that.
Cheers, I'll let you know how I get on.
http://www.syncro.org/VCTest.html
I've liberated the one from my spare front diff, came out dead easy on the bench!
What sealent was my next question but youve answered that.
Cheers, I'll let you know how I get on.
http://www.syncro.org/VCTest.html
Syncro 16" doka 2.1i
That's all good stuff on syncro.org about VCs except this, which, IMHO, is total "Balls".. and invented to maybe illustrate 'effective viscosity' or some such concept..
[img:500:452]http://www.syncro.org/sitephotos/VCtemp.JPG[/img]
No fluid even 'unique patented silicon fluid' has a temp~viscosity curve like that... it is what happens as temp and therefore internal pressure rises, but the vertical axis of that graph is not viscosity!
Probably an idealised schematic of Transmitted Torque Vs Temp
[img:500:452]http://www.syncro.org/sitephotos/VCtemp.JPG[/img]
No fluid even 'unique patented silicon fluid' has a temp~viscosity curve like that... it is what happens as temp and therefore internal pressure rises, but the vertical axis of that graph is not viscosity!
Probably an idealised schematic of Transmitted Torque Vs Temp
The 80-90 Tech Wikipedia Your 1st port of call

Syncro Kastenwagen / 16" Kombi Camper
Syncronaut No. 1
-
- Registered user
- Posts: 424
- Joined: 10 Oct 2005, 18:51
- 80-90 Mem No: 1053
- Location: Ross-on-Wye
Curious to know what happens when the temperature is less than -30 degrees - the 'apparent viscosity' appears to be rising. Or perhaps it's just an artistic embellishment!
80-90: 1053
Syncronauts: 15
T3 Syncro DOKA (makeover nearly finished)
T4 Syncro LWB Panel Van - now departed
T3 Syncro SIKA - deciding whether it's for the chop or worth saving
Syncronauts: 15
T3 Syncro DOKA (makeover nearly finished)
T4 Syncro LWB Panel Van - now departed
T3 Syncro SIKA - deciding whether it's for the chop or worth saving
- toomanytoys
- Trader
- Posts: 2872
- Joined: 11 Oct 2005, 18:37
- 80-90 Mem No: 41
- Location: Boston area, South Lincolnshire
No use speculating as that graph isn't Viscosity Vs temperature..
Silicon fluids (siloxanes) are used because they can be designed with a wide range of viscosities (e.g. higher than most fluids), are stable and can have quite low temp ~ viscosity gradients (viscosity reduces with temperature steadily, the opposite of what we think we want for a VC, but at a slower rate than most fluids)... they're also not very good lubricants (so shear and heat up quickly)
They would need to change phase to produce that difference, which they don't, or not at these temps and pressures...
Rheological fluids, those responding to magnetic fields, can be made to behave in the way one might wish, and these are in fact used in some power transmission, clutch and barke systems these days.
The primary driver of VC action is pressure (due to air gap being reduced by mixing, and expansion of the fluid)... until then, the viscosity is reducing as temp increases...
Aidan will tell you what the seals look like to contain this pressure (up to 100bar safety limit), you can tell how strong the unit needs to be to contain that pressure by picking one up !
Get the air gap too small and that 100bar can be exceeded

Silicon fluids (siloxanes) are used because they can be designed with a wide range of viscosities (e.g. higher than most fluids), are stable and can have quite low temp ~ viscosity gradients (viscosity reduces with temperature steadily, the opposite of what we think we want for a VC, but at a slower rate than most fluids)... they're also not very good lubricants (so shear and heat up quickly)
They would need to change phase to produce that difference, which they don't, or not at these temps and pressures...
Rheological fluids, those responding to magnetic fields, can be made to behave in the way one might wish, and these are in fact used in some power transmission, clutch and barke systems these days.
The primary driver of VC action is pressure (due to air gap being reduced by mixing, and expansion of the fluid)... until then, the viscosity is reducing as temp increases...
Aidan will tell you what the seals look like to contain this pressure (up to 100bar safety limit), you can tell how strong the unit needs to be to contain that pressure by picking one up !
Get the air gap too small and that 100bar can be exceeded

The 80-90 Tech Wikipedia Your 1st port of call

Syncro Kastenwagen / 16" Kombi Camper
Syncronaut No. 1
Great stuff, great feeling when you have all that traction
Like chalk and cheese aren't they - a syncro that works and one that doesn't
I'll then take the info from your thread and make sure we have it in the Wiki and see if Jenny can also put it on the Syncro website. If you have pictures to then we can host for you if you send them to:
syncronauts@ntlworld.com
and send back the links.
Like chalk and cheese aren't they - a syncro that works and one that doesn't

I'll then take the info from your thread and make sure we have it in the Wiki and see if Jenny can also put it on the Syncro website. If you have pictures to then we can host for you if you send them to:
syncronauts@ntlworld.com
and send back the links.
The 80-90 Tech Wikipedia Your 1st port of call

Syncro Kastenwagen / 16" Kombi Camper
Syncronaut No. 1
Images look very good thanks... ideal size. Will prob. transfer them to Wiki database so they're always there and links never get broken, thanks v.much for writing up..
Yes, change the prop bolts & nuts to the proper spec as CJ says... well spotted
Yes, change the prop bolts & nuts to the proper spec as CJ says... well spotted

The 80-90 Tech Wikipedia Your 1st port of call

Syncro Kastenwagen / 16" Kombi Camper
Syncronaut No. 1