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Know your
Land-Rover.....A Safety Bulletin.
Having a keen grasp on the precise operational characteristics of
your Land-Rover will most certainly yield a higher margin
of safe operation. One of the simplest safety strategies
which the intelligent operator can easily employ is to tap the
brake pedal in order to warn the operator of a following vehicle
that you are slowing down. Not everybody is attentive in
their driving habits, so if we diminish our speed subtly, an
inattentive following driver may not register the change, and
damage the rear-end of our cherished Land-Rover.
The diagnostic strategy is essentially as follows: back the
Land-Rover against a wall and stop the vehicle. Apply the hand
brake if the vehicle is on an incline. Then apply the
brakes and observe the exact point, with respect to pedal
pressure, at which the brake lights illuminate. There are
two types of brake lamp switches in the majority of vintage
Land-Rovers; one is hydraulically activated, and the other is
mechanically triggered. The hydraulic variety was
fitted into the high-pressure brake lines of Series II and
early IIa machines through vehicle Suffix E, while later vehicles
fitted with power assisted brakes utilised a mechanical switch.
Unfortunately the hydraulic switch is not adjustable; only
replacement of the switch can alter the point at which the brake
lamps come on.
The mechanical switch, however, can be adjusted by altering the
proximity of the switch to the brake pedal. Therefore, if
it is necessary to depress the brake pedal forcefully before the
brake lamps illuminate, the mechanical type of switch can be
moved closer to the brake pedal to cause the brake lights to come
on before the vehicle actually begins to slow down. Thus
one can simply tap the brake pedal lightly to alert following
drivers to the need for extra caution. If the hydraulic
switch is sluggish to respond it would probably be best to
replace it, as the switch is set at the factory to activate at a
low point of pressure. While the foregoing observations may
seem somewhat "fussy", perhaps, a well-tuned vehicle
coupled with an intelligent driving attitude could well avert an
catastrophic accident some day.
CK