- Joined
- Nov 3, 2014
- Messages
- 933
- Points
- 335
The elastomer "helper" cones on my motorhome were in a poor state after 18 years of service, and rear was more "bouncy" than it should be. I think the remains of the "bump stops" were about as much use as a piece of cold yorkshire pudding and looked rather similar !
I decided to replace with original style rather than anything more exotic like a semi-air setup. During replacement, I hit the common problem that the bolts were seized into the captive nuts in the chassis rail. Applying a fair amount of torque from a chain wrench to the upper metal cups simply resulted in breaking the feeble welds between the cups and the button heads of the bolts.
Fortunately, I found it possible to keep the old upper "cups", and simply lever out the old "rubber" which is held in place by a narrow formed ring. The new rubbers were removed from the replacements and swapped over to the new cups in-situ. They are quite a squeeze to get in, but it helped to have a combination of some silicone grease and a large jubilee clip to compress near the top. I then levered upwards with a crowbar which got it most of the way in, a prod with a large blunt screwdriver persuaded the last section to pop in.
This shortcut is unfortunately no help if you really do need to extract the upper cup in order to fit semi-air. To do that you would need to drill out the old bolts, and due to lack of room (the rear axle and leaf spring is directly in the way) a right angled drill attachment would be necessary
I decided to replace with original style rather than anything more exotic like a semi-air setup. During replacement, I hit the common problem that the bolts were seized into the captive nuts in the chassis rail. Applying a fair amount of torque from a chain wrench to the upper metal cups simply resulted in breaking the feeble welds between the cups and the button heads of the bolts.
Fortunately, I found it possible to keep the old upper "cups", and simply lever out the old "rubber" which is held in place by a narrow formed ring. The new rubbers were removed from the replacements and swapped over to the new cups in-situ. They are quite a squeeze to get in, but it helped to have a combination of some silicone grease and a large jubilee clip to compress near the top. I then levered upwards with a crowbar which got it most of the way in, a prod with a large blunt screwdriver persuaded the last section to pop in.
This shortcut is unfortunately no help if you really do need to extract the upper cup in order to fit semi-air. To do that you would need to drill out the old bolts, and due to lack of room (the rear axle and leaf spring is directly in the way) a right angled drill attachment would be necessary
- Fuel Type
- Diesel
- Model
- Ducato 2.3
- Year
- 2008
- Mileage
- 65000