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Archive for the ‘D90 Exterior’ Category

D90 Fitting Southdown Raised Air Intake

November 10th, 2008

Fitting Southdown Raised Air Intake

Before Installation Remove Wing Grill and Internal Components of Original Air
Intake.

1. Position wing moulding 120mm in front of bulkhead on either wing as required
‘A’. Mark hole on wing top and drill a circle of holes to create clearance for
stainless sown pipe. Clean hole with half round file.

2. Position stainless L bracket approx 140mm down from roof gutter with holes
facing inwards. Mark and drill holes ‘B’ for tapping 6mm. Insert two 6mm bolts
and washers supplied, and secure L bracket.

3. Insert down pipe through wing and attach stainless clamp to sandwich L bracket.
Raise down pipe up or down ‘D’ to align parallel to windscreen frame and grip
stainless clamp onto the L bracket with G clamp or similar. Drill two 6mm holes
‘C’ mark position of down pipe to stainless clamp with marker pen for final
assembly.

4. Adjust length of down pipe ‘E’ in order to attach flexible pipe supplied with
jubilee clip. Cut off excess with a hacksaw, remove all sharp edges so as not to
damage flexible pipe.

5. Degrease wing surface, down pipe and back of wing moulding with solvent.
Apply black silicone to bore and back of wing moulding. Carefully insert own
pipe into wing moulding and adhere to wing top. Adjust height of down pipe to
pre-determined mark as in paragraph 3. assemble stainless clamp to L bracket
with remaining nuts, bolts and washers.

6. Attach flexible pipe to down pipe with silicone and jubilee clip and route through
to air filter assembly, attach flexible pipe to air filter entry (on 300 defender it
may be necessary to use the reducer from 3.5” to 2.5” from the standard pipe
work).

7. Slide the ram scoop facing forward onto the stainless down pipe (adjust overall
height by trimming down the down pipe with hack saw as in paragraph 4 as
required). Adhere with silicone or stainless self tapper supplied by drilling small
hole under the front of ram scoop.

8. Finally remove excess silicone with a damp rag and replace wing grill.
Allow 48 HRS for silicone to cure before rotating ram scoop for deep wading.
Black silicone is a perishable product and is not supplied in the kit, but is available
from most motor factor and accessory shops. Tiger seal or equivalent may be used
instead of silicone.

D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

D90 Southdown Snorkle

April 23rd, 2008

The passenger side setup requires a little planning and nuance, I guess. I was emailing Jay Pappas (I think his first name is Jay, maybe it was his intial) at South Down USA, and it was explained this way. When mounting on the passenger side the ducting goes straight down the fender wall then underneath the heater unit and up and over to the air cleaner. I used to have a picture of the way it was done, I will have to find it though. It was done though I am sure of it. I always thought I would do it on the passenger side it I put on a snorkel on my d-90.

D90 Exterior

D90 Door Hinge Bolts Sizes

January 8th, 2008

Door Hinge Bolt Door Side side:
Factory Size = 5/16 x 24 Thread, Length = 2.

Door Hinge Bolt Pillar side:
Factory Size = 5/16 x 24 Thread, Length = 1.5″

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

D90 Lug Nut Wrench Size 27mm

December 7th, 2007

1 1/16 or a 27mm is a better fit.

D90 Drivetrain, D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

D90 Steel Wheel Info

November 30th, 2007

All 90/110 wheels are 33mm, only the latest XD/Wolf type are 20.6mm

ANR4636PM are Standard 5.5F x16 wheels for 90/110 are welded construction in primer finish, the earlier NRC7578 were rivetted construction.

ANR1543PM are 6.5L x 16 heavy duty rivtted construction

ANR5593PM are 6.5J x 16 x 20.6mm XD/Wolf are welded construction, or ANR4583PM rivetted construction

ANR5593PM is the tubed version of the Wolf rim.

ANR1534PM (20.6 Offset) is listed as One Ton rim .They are only suitable for tubed tyre usage.They are an inch wider with that extra inch going on the outside (ie it looks like a wider standard 110 steel wheel) with slightly less offset than the 5.5 inch wheels

272309 is an old 109 wheel. They are 5.5″ wide with a different offset than the anr4636.

(5.5 inch rims have 33mm of offset, the 6.5 inch rims have 20.6mm of offset).
————
Tubeless.
ANR4583PM 6.5J x 16 130 and Wolf XD
NTC5193PM 7.0 x 16 Discovery

Tubed.
NRC7578PM 5.5F x 16 (riveted centre) 90 and 110
ANR4636PM 5.5F x 16 (welded centre) 90 and 110
NTC4135PM 6.0J x 16 (riveted centre) 90 only
ANR4635PM 6.0J x 16 (welded centre) 90 only
ANR1534PM 6.5L x 16 HD 110 and 130
ANR5593PM 6.5J x 16 130 and Wolf XD

—————–

Land Rover Wheel Sizes
Model Rim Dia Width Offset Part#
88 ‘59 thru ‘67 16″ 5″ 1″ 231601PM
88 ‘67 thru ‘74 15″ 6″ 1″ NLA
109 ‘59 thru ‘71 16″ 5.5″ 1.75″ 272309
109, 90, 110, 88 16″ 5.5″ 2″ NRC7578PM
130, 110 USA 16″ 6.5″ 2.25″ ANR1534PM

——————-

272309 109, offset from rim centre line 1 13/16″ (1.8125″) Road wheel, well base rim type, 5.5″ x 16″
568966 109, offset from rim centre line 1 5/16″ (1.3125″) Road wheel, well base rim type, 5.5″ x 16″

D90 Exterior, D90 Misc, D90 Suspension

D90 Window Seal

November 23rd, 2007

The parts catalog lists a weatherstrip (MWC4771) and a filler strip (302178).

D90 Exterior, D90 Interior, D90 Misc

D90 ST Cage Light Mounting Bolts

November 21st, 2007

Bolts for light tabs on D90 Soft Top Cage are M7 - 1.00 x 25,

D90 Exterior

D90 Stainless Hardware List

November 12th, 2007

D90 Stainless Hardware List spreadsheet is found here.

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

D90 Bumper Mount Jerry Can and HiLift Carrier

November 9th, 2007

A bumper mounted Jerry Can holder and HiLift Jack mount build up here.

D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

D90 Hard Top Installation

November 1st, 2007

All you have to do is remove all of the front and interior roll cages…T45 and T50 torx bits…then there is an aluminum plate on top of the windscreen which has 6 (I think) phillips head 6mm screws holding it in…replace these phillips head things with hex head 6mm bolts (1″ should do fine) there are nutserts in there…this bolts the top to the windscreen…on my 95 there were nutserts in the top edge of the rear tub…I did a prelim set up with the sides and measured where the nutsert holes were and drill through the bottom edge of the side panels…then tentatively loosely mounted the sides onto the rear tub…mounted the top loosely and then kind of forced everything to line up…don’t forget there are rubber seals between the sides and the tub, the sides and the top and the fron of the top and the windscreen…when all looks good, tighten down and you’re done except for mounting the rear liftgate…I would have mounted the station wagen front cage but the one I bought was bent and unusable so am running without it. My original ex-MOD soft top which I converted to hard top was run without a roll cage too…
George
ps
just to be clear, you do not need to drill holes into the rear bed/tub or windshield…just into the hardtop sides. I used 1/4-20 bolts/nuts to bolt the top to the sides. the rear tub nutserts take 6mm bolts…I used 2″ long ones. and further clarification the rear roll cage is totally not usable with the Euro spec hard top.

——

The POE top is actually easy to put on with two people. Ron and I put my POE top on, and tightened it down so it would stay on for my 2 hour drive home. later that week i took the time to take it off again and wash it out and i put a seal on the windshield and then drilled two holes right under where the top of the seatbeat hooks in. 1 hole on each side of the tub. there are these brackets that pull the top down for a snug fit to the tub. other that that those were the only two holes. I also got 6 #6 metric bolts about an inch long and stacked about 3 washers on them and bolts the front of the top to the windshield. you need these 3 washers to insure that you can get a wrench in there to get them undone later when you want the top off. trust me its a tight fit if you dont!!!

I do wish my tailgate matched up better with the rear window. I have about a 1/4 gap between them. but other than that i love my POE top

George do you have this gap there too? I cut a door seal and put it on the window side of the top so that my gap is a bit smaller. is there anyway to close it up to “seal” it?

——

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

D90 Liftgate Installation

November 1st, 2007

For mounting the liftgate, I drilled the rear of the top to attach the series liftgate hinges and used button head hex bolts for a smoother, rivet-like appearance. I also removed the rear washer jet and plugged it using another identical bolt. Two 30-pound gas struts were required to support the lift gate (I didnt want to use the original series prop-rods) and the brackets are stainless ones which seemed the proper shape. All the gas-strut stuff was sourced from McMaster-Carr. Since I had a used, imperfect headliner, I didnt feel bad cutting it to accomodate the hinges.

——

Here are the pictures you requested. I’ll email a larger format to you also. just thought I’d post here in case anyone is also interested.

The gate is locked shut by a flange at the bottom of the gate that tucks behind the tailgate when closed. Because of this the T-handle is not necessary. The hole in the gate for the locking T-handle is covered by a LR badge that is stuck on by glue / tape. I think you can get them at R.N.

More pictures here.

The brackets are stainless stuff from McMaster.

One thing that worked out was that the triangular shape of the lower brackets made a perfect surface for the locking rods to grip. When the gate is closed, you turn the handle and the pegs extend out and engage the angled side. It worked out to be just right to squeeze the seal and hold the gate in the right position when closed. The seal is compressed enough that nothing rattles.

More pictures here.
——

Randy- are you using the lift gate in normal series configuration? i.e where a drop-down tailgate closes first and then the lift gate closes second? Also, what came on your lift gate? Was it stripped? The stock set up is a strip that rivets to the outside bottom edge, and a seal retained by a metal strip that rivets to the inside bottom edge of the lift gate.

If you want the stock series parts you can have them cheap (I’ll have to have my wife hunt around for them, they’re back at home). I couldnt use them since the NAS tailgate must be closed after the lift gate because of the tire carrier and brake light bar. I bought a piece of LR weatherstripping that looked like it would work, I’d have to check the part number if you wanted that.

I also have the series prop rods you were asking George about if you want them so you dont have to use gas struts. I looked at both options and went with the gas struts - much easier.

The gas struts are 2x 9416K2 in the 30lb strength
I used 4x 9416K86 M6 nylon ball socket fittings
2x 9512K12 304 stainless ball brackets
and 1x each (left and right) 9512K16 and 9512K17

Note that each of the parts are available in a variety of materials. You can even get 100% marine grade stainless gas struts for 75 bucks each. I went the economical route except for the brackets which are much nicer in stainless. The nylon ball joint sockets cost like 1/8 of the stainless and I figure will resist rust at least as well

I used a 332564 for the seal. It think its a series rear door seal of some kind. Got it from George.

—–

My seal is simple and effective - it is made with a thin metal retainer - a strip of 1/2″ wide 1/8″ thick annodized aluminum - from the hardware store and a piece of garage door bottom seal -(dense foam strip with abrasion resistance) I chose that seal because it is chemically engineered to withstand UV radiation. Mine has worked quite well over the past few years. I will post some picks of it for you this evening. It is very simple to attach - I used the series of holes that are already in bottom of the lift gate to attachethe unit with small SS machine screws.

More pictures here.
——

The hinge (large u shaped thingy) is the same part POE to 1960s Series truck.
The bracket that bolts to the roof on a POE is different than a Series rig, but both will work. A little shaping and the Series Rover one will rivet right in, or you can make a simple corss bolt bracket just like the POE unit.
The set up I used was a 1960s Series liftgate with 1960s hardware and some gas struts from NAPA.
Then added a small steel piece at the bottom of the liftegate to have a seal surtface between the tailgate and the liftagte.
I made the glass bigger though to match the side galss and give a better rear view.

——

I did a very similar thing a while back. Got the parts from Canada off a parts series truck… the hinge brackets needed a little choppling to make fit properly but it was really easy.. then as mike said rivit in and you have a liftgate.

One thing that was tricky was getting the spacing for the seal right. But it was not that big of a deal, just took some planning… good luck!!

——

I got the brackets from Rovers North…I’m attaching two pix to show the cuts I decided to make on the brackets…once cut like this and excess metal bent out of the way (too lazy to cut and trim!) they slide right in…there is a right and left to the brackets…I bolted the hinges to the rear door first then hung the door on the lip of the upper edge of the opening and made sure it was centered…then I marked where the hinges lined up left and right…then I positioned the brackets, marked the rivet holes…drilled and riveted in place…the pins for the brackets (must be ordered as they don’t come with the brackets are weird…one of them was too big so dry test em first…also see 3rd pic of completed do-it-yourself POE liftgated soft top to hard top conversion…man it was cold without that liftgate…I really prefer the liftgate idea to a door because you can drive with lumber sticking out the back with the liftgate open…also great rain shield while standing out in weather.

More pictures here.
——

I’m not sure how the liftgate is configured, but the f-glass lift gate has a flange along its bottom edge that prevents the liftgate from opening when the tailgate is closed. A piece of weatherstripping attaches to this flange and presses against the top of the inside face of the tailgate creating a seal. It would seem a simple matter to take an L-shaped piece of aluminum and screw it to the bottom of the POE liftgate to replicate this flange, then attach a piece of weather stripping to the flange and be all set up.

——

In the POE configuration, you don’t use all the Series locks and handles etc (also, I can’t remember how the Series liftgate used to work on my old Series IIa)…I removed all that stuff and am mounting a 3″ metal strip on the inside bottom edge of the liftgate which will have a piece of the weather seal (that goes around the rear opening) on it…the tailgate will lock and keep the liftgate closed. All I have to do now is figure out how to mount two gas struts and where to source the struts and their mounting brackets…any suggestions are welcome.

——

dimensions on Center Line of mounting bolts:

Open - 21 - 3/4″
Closed - 18”

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

D90 Lift Gate Installation

November 1st, 2007

For mounting the liftgate, I drilled the rear of the top to attach the series liftgate hinges and used button head hex bolts for a smoother, rivet-like appearance. I also removed the rear washer jet and plugged it using another identical bolt. Two 30-pound gas struts were required to support the lift gate (I didnt want to use the original series prop-rods) and the brackets are stainless ones which seemed the proper shape. All the gas-strut stuff was sourced from McMaster-Carr. Since I had a used, imperfect headliner, I didnt feel bad cutting it to accomodate the hinges.

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior, D90 Interior

D90 Heated Mirror Installation

November 1st, 2007

Installing Mirror Heating to a Land Rover Defender

by Espen S. Johnsen

Original article is here.

I recently bought a Heated Mirror Kit for my Defender through eBay. The kit contained instructions for a quick and easy installation, but I wanted something that looked less “aftermarket”. So I spent a few hours trying to achieve this, and in the end the result turned out pretty well. The following is a summary of what I did, and could be used as alternative fitting instructions. If your car is not a LHD or not a 2001 MY some deviation from the described procedure may be needed.

Preparing for cable inside cab

  • Remove instrument pack and wiper motor cover
  • Optional: Remove crash pad and upper fascia trim
  • Optional: Remove lower fascia panel (I did not do this)
  • Drill a 9 mm hole through the firewall a few millimetres inside the upper screw securing the wiper cover. If the lower fascia panel has been removed, drill a similar hole on the right hand side. If not, drill a hole through 2 layers of steel plates between the upper screw securing the lower fascia and the outer edge of the firewall. See photos further down on the page.


Removing door hinges and mirrors.

This is easiest done by removing the stud securing the trim casing in the top front so that a half moon ring spanner can be inserted.

  • Open the door, wind down the window and unscrew the screws from the outside. Use a helping hand to hold up the door while doing this. When done carefully close the door and lock it so you don’t open it accidently. Finally unscrew hinge from the firewall and separate mirror from hinge.
  • Repeat the procedure for the other door.

Drilling and feeding cable through arms

  • Align and fasten the mirror arm in a column type drilling machine and drill a 5.5 mm vertical hole through the outer part of the arm. This will of course weaken the arm slightly, but there is still plenty of metal left so it shouldn’t be a problem.
  • Drill horizontally a 6.5 mm hole from the groove and into the base of the arm. The distance from the flange facing the plastic cap and to the centre of this hole should be 63 mm. To do this, a drill bit that is at least 145 mm long is needed. Align and fasten the arm on its back as shown in the picture.
  • Make a 6 mm slightly oval hole in the side of the plastic cap as low as possible.
  • Dismantle about 20 cm of the cable and feed it through the 5.5 mm hole from the groove side. Feed the other part through the hole in the base and then through the cap. Use some lubricant to make the cable glide smoothly. Solder or crimp 6.3 mm female blade terminals to the wires.
  • Repeat the procedure for the other arm.


Mirror housings and glass

  • Carefully remove the glass from the housing.
  • Drill a 10 mm hole through the centre of the loose plate and if necessary, the housing it self. Feed through the wires from the arm.
  • Attach housing to arm. Optional: replace that rusty M5×20 socket screw with one of stainless steel grade.
  • Peel of the paper protecting the adhesive and apply the heating element to the back of the glass. Connect the wire terminals to the element (be very careful as the elements are very fragile).
  • Remount glass into housing.
  • Repeat the procedure for the other housing.

Mirror Housing


Remounting mirrors and hinges

  • Make a groove for the cable in the stationary half of the hinge, as seen in the picture. Apply some paint to prevent the hinge from rusting.


Hinge Groove

  • Mount mirror to hinge. Make a clamp on the lower screw to secure the cable to the hinge. Optional: replace the UNF1/4×1 screws with similar screws of stainless steel grade.
  • Feed cable through the holes in the firewall and attach hinge. Make sure that the cable lays in the groove and that there is enough slack so it doesn’t get stretch when the door is fully opened.
  • Carefully open door and remount hinge
  • Repeat the procedure for the other side.

Completing the wiring

  • Feed the cable from the left hand mirror up through the dash and across the steering column.
  • If upper fascia trim has been removed, feed the cable behind lower fascia and through the cable duct and then in behind the instrument pack. If not, feed the cable as described in the original fitting instructions.
  • Add switch as described in the original fitting instructions and connect to 12V feed.
  • Remount fascia, wiper motor cover, crash pad and instrument pack

D90 Electrical, D90 Exterior

D90 SW door install on ST

July 24th, 2007

A few comments so far on the install:
1 - I needed longer bolts for the nader pin assembly
2 - The bar that keeps the door for opening too wide is not located in the same place on the SW doors, I need to make a small braket to make it work
3 - On my ST the speakers are located in the door and the interior panel is built out to accomodate the size, on the panels I have I need to get a spacer ring so the speakers do not hit the window when it is rolled down.

That is it so far, nothing major, pretty straight forward.

You probably have new-type doors - the check strap changed design after 1994. All you probably need to do is get the new check-strap assembly and bolt it right on.
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D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

D90 Door Adjustment

June 24th, 2007

Modifications
QUICK TIP: adjust Defender doors
By Simon Ward-Hastelow
Published: 30th Mar 2007
Original article: http://www.difflock.com/magazine/Modifications/QUICK_TIP_adjust_Defender_doors.shtml

There’s nothing more satisfying than hearing a door shut properly with a positive thud, some vehicle manufacturers use it as a selling point. But after a while the doors on a Defender will begin to fight back. THe hinges wear, the latch moves and before long you find yourself standing back and slamming the door shut to get it to lock properly. A quick bit of fiddling with a screwdriver can put it right.

The latch itself is held in place with just two bolts which attach to a plate with captive nuts in the door pillar. The holes in the door pillar are larger than necessary to allow the latch to be adjusted a fair bit. This also means that the latch can move backwards into the vehicle which means you have to slam the door a little bit harder each time for the door to contact the latch.

All you need to do is loosen the bolts and pull it back towards the outside of the vehicle.

In the picture (left) you can see where the edge of the door has been rubbing on the latch, in this case a shim needs to be removed (see below)

You can further adjust the latch fore and aft with the use of spacer shims (see picture below-left with red pointer) to make sure the latch is truly centred on the locking mechanism in the door. Usually this is only necessary if you’ve had the doors off for some reason or fitted different doors.

BE AWARE! If you fully remove the bolts the captive-nut plate could drop down the hole inside the door pillar (see green pointer) and it is a fiddly job to get it back out again. You don’t need to fully remove the latch to fit the shims they have locating slots cut into them so just loosening the latch allows you to slide a shim into place without removing the bolts.

If you need to adjust the the entire door, to straighten up the shut-lines for instance, firstly close the door then slightly loosen the bolts holding the exterior hinges on the door pillar (not the door itself) and raise or lower the door using the handle until the desired location is found then re-tighten the hinge bolts.

NOTE: if the bolts are rusty this is a lot easier said than done, spray them generously with penetrating fluid beforehand or consider replacing them altogether with stainless bolts.

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

D90 Tail Lamp Boot Kit

June 3rd, 2007

I have been replacing the tail lamps over the past few months, one at a time as they fail due to corrosion in the sockets. It seems like a terrible design putting the rear lights in the wheel well open to the abuse of everything coming off the tires (mud, water, rocks, road kill).

Anyway, I stumbled onto this at Rovers North and wanted to share it with everyone. Seems like a good investment.

http://www.roversnorth.com/store/sh…kit-defender-90

Kit includes new bulb sockets, rubber boots, clamp, connector repair kit and sealing compound. Does all five rear lamp assemblies.
———

The kit was an LR recall due to the bulb socket corrosion cause by moisture getting into the bulb sockets , both of my D90s have the upgrade done in 2001. can’t recall if did the recall under warranty. I still had to change the bulb sockets 2 years ago on my D90 , due to wading in some deep puddles , but never had a problem on my wife’s D90.

——–

I ordered and installed that kit when I rebuilt my truck in 04.

It is a challenge to get a seal around the thin part where the wires go through - I used some sillly-cone on that end. The kit includes plastic clamps for sealing the large end around the bulb holder.

It seemed like a good set-up, and it appeared to keep water out for a few months, but by the following winter, water was finding its way back in.

I used all new parts when I did the install, the kit, bulb holders, bulbs and even tail light lenses were all new. I also packed the connectors with dielctric grease.

These really only seem to work in ideal situations, you have to keep the mating surfaces super-clean, ensure the boot slips all the way onto the back of the lens, seal the small end perfectly, and get the clamp on tight.

I think the only real long-term fix is moving to Arizona or buying ECR’s LED kit.

———-

My 90 came with them (previous owner), but still had the corrosion problem. I ended up doing the drain hole + dielectric grease to finally stop the problem.

D90 Electrical, D90 Exterior

D90 ST Roll Cage Differences

May 30th, 2007

The ‘94 has a different angle bar off the back of the first roll bar. The bar has a bracket bolted on the bottom which is then attached to the capping. The ‘95 and ‘97 is molded rubber at the area that attaches to the capping. This is the only difference on canvas products on the Defender 90.

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

Keys

May 14th, 2007

Here are the aftermarket part numbers for the D90 keys:
Ignition: Ilco # X157 or EZ # LF17 (either one will work, they are identical)
Doors: Ilco # 62FT or EZ # F68YT (either one will work, they are identical)

The OEM ignition key blank (with the plastic bow) IS only available to the dealers, although the all-metal Ilco blank is identical in size and thickness. It has a normal size hole in the bow as opposed to the OEM’s wide-open design.

The Ilco door key has a smaller bow then the all-metal OEM key blank and IMHO looks better (if you’re into keys that is). Interesting side note about the door key- it’s actually a Jaguar key blank.

I decided to replace my worn door key and just went and picked up 10 of each in case anyone else needs one or both. Or just give the guy in the locksmith van the above key numbers and he’ll be able to get them for you.

I’d strongly recommend having the blanks cut by a business with a “code” or “punch” machine as opposed to just a cutting wheel. The code machines actually stamps a new key instead of copying one that is already worn. Feel free to email me privately with any questions.

Source: D-90.com

D90 Exterior

Sliding Window Replacement

May 14th, 2007

I have aluminum sides/top on a POE top, so I don’t know whether or not you have the same top, but I did replace the glass (same piece) as you. At least on my top, I don’t know how you can replace it without removing the entire assembly, but that is not really a big deal–it just seems like it would be. For mine, first take off the rubber trim–just find the break and pull it all off–it goes back in pretty easy. This will reveal rivits that hold the window in. Drill these out–it will take under 20 minutes. The window frame then pops out. At the top of the frame where the vertical cross member is, you will see
a screw (there is one at the bottom too, but you only need to remove 1 screw). When you take the screw out, the frame will be able to flex up–this will allow you to take the window out. Assemble in reverse order and re-rivit it back together. It is VERY easy. When putting the rubber gasket the covers up the rivits back on, I used liquid detergent/water and a plastic putty knife thing.

D90 Exterior, D90 Interior

Paint Codes

May 14th, 2007

Paint Codes

Brooklands Green LRC334/HUX
Cornish Cream LRC374/NCN
Portofino Red LRC390/CUF
Ardennes Green Metallic Clearcoat LRC413/HUL
Beluga Black Clearcoat LRC416/PUE
Aries LRC424/JUH
Plymouth Blue Metallic Clearcoat LRC434/JUJ
Westminster Metallic Clearcoat LRC445/LUQ
Alpine White LRC456/NUC
Pembroke Metallic Clearcoat LRC476/LUG
Roman Bronze Metallic Clearcoat LRC479/GUA
Caprice Teal Pearl Clearcoat LRC533/UMQ
Montpellier Pearl Clearcoat LRC536/CUY
AA Yellow LRC559/FMB
Coniston Green LRC570/HYE
Avalon Blue Pearl Clearcoat LRC575/JUV
British Racing Green Metallic Clearcoat LRC617
Carmen Red Pearl Clearcoat LRC843/COG
Mosswood Metallic Clearcoat LRC987/HOT
Beluga Black Clearcoat LRC416/PUE
Tangiers Orange LRC761

D90 Exterior, D90 Misc

Hood Front Adjustment

April 17th, 2007

Yes…
There is a big flat nut in there you have to lossen up first, then you can tighten the slot with your screw driver.

D90 Chassis, D90 Exterior

LR3 rear door decal

December 26th, 2006

Installing Land Rover decal on rear door.

http://blog.nextstepdesigns.com/?p=33

D90 Exterior

LR3 Hidden Winch mount

December 26th, 2006

LR3 Hidden Winch mount info
http://www.disco3.co.uk/forum/topic4211.html

D90 Exterior