Tuesday, February 12, 2019

2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Technical Service Bulletin # TECLTB004012 Date: 120613

2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Technical Service Bulletin # TECLTB004012 Date: 120613



Wheels/Tires - Steering Wheel Shimmy/Vibration



TECHNICAL BULLETIN



LTB00401NAS2



13 JUNE 2012



ISSUE 2 CHANGES ARE HIGHLIGHTED IN GRAY





SECTION: 204



Tire / Wheel Balancing and Optimization



2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Page 27



AFFECTED VEHICLE:



CONDITION SUMMARY:



Situation:



The steering wheel may exhibit a vibration / shimmy while driving. This may be caused by a road wheel / tire assembly imbalance and / or



temporary tire flat-spotting.



Action:



In the event of a customer concern of steering wheel vibration / shimmy, refer to the procedure outlined below to balance and optimize the tire /



wheel assemblies and identify tires which may have a temporary flat-spot condition.



PARTS:



Wheel weights ........locally sourced Qty: as required



TOOLS:



Hunter 9700 / 9712 wheel balance machine



NOTE:



To ensure that the road wheel / tire assembly is balanced correctly, Land Rover recommends the use of the Haweka 9700 hub-to-wheel



five-fingered clamp to support the road wheel / tire assembly on the balance machine.



WARRANTY:



NOTE:



Repair procedures are under constant review, and therefore times are subject to change; those quoted here must be taken as guidance only.



Always refer to DDW to obtain the latest repair time.



NOTE:



Factory wheel alignment and wheel balancing are covered for 12 months / 12,500 miles, (20,000 km) whichever occurs first, for OEM



equipment only. Refer to Warranty Policies & Procedures manual for further information.



DDW requires the use of causal part numbers. Labor only claims must show the causal part number with a quantity of zero.



Normal Warranty policies and procedures apply



2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Page 28



REPAIR PROCEDURE



VERIFY CUSTOMER CONCERN



NOTE:



Step 1 of the procedure is part of the initial vehicle preparation process. No claim should be initiated if the performance of this step at initial



vehicle preparation resolves the concern.



NOTE:



Until flat-spots are removed, significant shimmy may be present, even if the car has only stood overnight. A test drive is required to ensure



temporary tire flat spots are removed. For longer term flat spots, a longer drive may be required. The test drive should be carried out on normal



open roads to allow the highest speed that speed limits and road / traffic conditions allow.



1. If the vehicle is undergoing initial vehicle preparation, perform the following as part of the test drive:



^ Refer to the tire pressure label and adjust the tire pressures to the recommended cold tire pressures.



^ Drive the vehicle a minimum of 10 miles (15km) before attempting to assess shimmy.



^ Assess the level of wheel vibration.



2. If a customer complaint is being resolved, perform the following:



^ Refer to the tire pressure label and adjust the tire pressures to the recommended cold tire pressures.



^ Drive the vehicle for a minimum of 10 miles (15km) before attempting to assess shimmy.





^ Assess the level of wheel vibration.



3. If the level of steering vibration is considered acceptable, no further action is required.



4. If the levels of vibration remain unacceptable, refer to 'BALANCE WHEELS AS REQUIRED' below.





BALANCE WHEELS AS REQUIRED



1. Refer to Workshop Manual, section 100-02: Jacking and Lifting, and raise the vehicle immediately upon returning to the workshop to avoid



inducing further tire flat spots.



2. Remove all four road wheel / tire assemblies for balancing.



NOTE:



For adhesive weights, use the attachment arm on the Hunter machine to ensure accurate weight positioning.



3. Mount the wheel / tire assembly (using the correct wheel fitting



attachment to the balance machine) and balance road wheel and tire assemblies until the residual imbalance dynamic is minimized.



^ Target is 0g (zero grams) on each plane; maximum is inner



5g, outer 5g.



2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Page 29



^ Use the 'bulls-eye' balancing mode to minimize residual imbalance.



4. The maximum tire road force variations (RFV) for each road wheel / tire assembly should be 60 Newton (6.1 kgf / 13.4 lbf) first harmonic RFV,



100 Newton (10.2 kgf / 22.5 lbf) peak-to-peak.



5. If these levels cannot be achieved, perform the following:



^ Remove the tire.



^ Follow the match mounting procedure as detailed by the



Hunter machine.



^ Mark the high point of 1st harmonic RFV on the outer (and



inner for future reference) sidewall of the tire.



^ Install the lowest 1st harmonic RFV wheel / tire assemblies



to the front axle.





^ Print out the results of balance and force variation (before and after); attach to repair order.



NOTE:



If RFV equipment is not available and the tire has not been removed from the wheel and the RFV spot (red dot) is still visible this, should be



installed at the top.



6. Prior to tightening the wheel nuts, the high-point of RFV should be marked and the road wheel / tire assembly installed to the vehicle with the



RFV high point at the top.



NOTE:



Nothing should be used to brace the wheel while tightening the nuts as this can disturb the match mounting.



7. Install all four road wheel / tire assemblies.



8. Tighten wheel nuts to the specified torque.



9. Lower the vehicle.



10. Drive the vehicle for approximately 5 miles (7km) on normal roads and up to speeds of approximately 50 mph (80kph) to verify correction of



steering vibration.



2010 Land Rover Range Rover (LM) V8-5.0L Page 30

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