Home > Technical (L322) > Retrofitting FBH on 2006 4.2 S/C |
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Giantlandyman Member Since: 25 Nov 2015 Location: Essex Posts: 800 |
I've seen one petrol driven FBH for sale on Ebay and that was a while back.
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27th Nov 2016 10:58pm |
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axle Member Since: 28 Oct 2007 Location: Perth Perth the end of the Earth Posts: 2964 |
You would need all that gubbins and more but without the change over valve to stop the thermo top heater trying to heat the engine block instead of the cabin you won't get very far . 2008 MY Supercharged
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28th Nov 2016 12:05am |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8244 |
IMHO you really don't need one, the petrols warm up so quick it's not really necessary, put the heated front and rear screens, seat heater and steering wheel heater on and your toasty and the windows are clear in no time at all..... Pete
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28th Nov 2016 12:08am |
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Giantlandyman Member Since: 25 Nov 2015 Location: Essex Posts: 800 |
A simpler solution might be to fit an aftermarket electric pre-heater such as this
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28th Nov 2016 9:25am |
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ptjs1 Member Since: 15 Nov 2016 Location: Kent Posts: 9 |
Thank you all so far for your replies. I've now collected the car and it certainly doesn't seem to be installed. It's not available via the on-screen configuration.
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30th Nov 2016 11:38pm |
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axle Member Since: 28 Oct 2007 Location: Perth Perth the end of the Earth Posts: 2964 |
The 4.2 warms up really quickly so I don't think you have much to worry about there and as I said earlier I your car wasn't built with the change over valve the FBH can't be retro fitted without a lot of work , it's one of those classic "yes you can do it but it's cheaper to sell your car and buy one with it fitted " scenarios . 2008 MY Supercharged
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1st Dec 2016 1:34am |
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dan_uk_1984 Member Since: 12 Nov 2008 Location: Bude, Cornwall Posts: 4014 |
This is something I looked into too, the Petrol FBH itself is relatively difficult to find, although they do crop up. I have owned one L322 with the petrol FBH - Dolphinboy has it now.
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1st Dec 2016 10:27am |
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Haylands Member Since: 04 Mar 2014 Location: East Yorkshire Posts: 8244 |
IMHO this is an old wives tale, never seen any evidence to back up the 80% wear claim, which originated with Magnetec oil years ago, trying to worry you into buying their product. Modern engines are built with up to 20 times the tolerance of old ones, they fit together better and do not wear significantly at start up, the designers now know far better how different metals work with each other and how to build longevity into a design, the worst thing for these engines is deposits in the oil, regular oil changes is far more important than starting wear... The FBH will not operate for long on a cold morning before it turns off to save the battery, in that short time the oil will not have been warmed at all, 90% of the oil is sat in the sump nowhere near the water jacket, the small amount of heat created by the FBH will have been absorbed by the large amount of metal the engine is made of and increased the temp by maybe a few degrees at most... The FBH is designed to increase the cylinder temp to assist a diesel to start and then to run after start to warm the inside of the FF as the diesel engine runs so cool it takes ages to warm up... Your petrol engine will heat up many times faster than a diesel.... I really wouldn't worry about the cold mornings and wear... Just change all the fluids in the FF now you have it, then check and replace regularly for many years of grin inspiring driving..... Pete __________________________________________________ 2014 L405 Autobiography SDV8 4.4 Loire Blue Ebony interior 2011 L322 Vogue SE 4.4 TDV8 Baltic Blue. Parchment over Navy Interior. Sold 2012 L322 Autobiography 5.0 Supercharged Ipanema Sand, Jet Interior. Sold 2002 L322 Vogue 4.4 V8 Epson Green, Ivory over Aspen Interior (Fatty Offroader) Sold -Click for Project Fatty off roader- |
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1st Dec 2016 11:20am |
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Rewmer Member Since: 14 Jan 2013 Location: Essex Posts: 142 |
I would say do it. Ive got diesel heater Im going to plumb into my 4.4 petrol as soon as Ive fixed all the other issues. I retro fitted it to my old Td5 disco, but pulled it out when I sold it. Im not gont to try and do anything fancy, just plumb it straight into the water system and use the GSM remote I bought for £30. along with a 2 or 3 litre tank .They are clever systems, fully self contained if you get the right one, just add power and away it goes. They have built in battery protection as well so wont flatten the battery for the sake of heat.
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1st Dec 2016 5:31pm |
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Riedland Member Since: 06 Oct 2015 Location: Far east Posts: 21 |
As Haylands wrote, the genuine FBH fitted in the sc is not designed to warm up the engine but the car interior for a 30 mn cycle (the Land Rover marketing must have few women in their staff). Rather than needing 4 mn to reach working temperature, with the pre-heating it will take approx 3 mn
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1st Dec 2016 9:15pm |
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fisha Member Since: 25 Sep 2009 Location: Scotland Posts: 1370 |
Genuinely think its a waste of time and effort in our climate for petrols. As said above, given that this forum and others are areas where you are likely to see issues being commented, I dont ever recall seeing systemic issues of engine wear attributed to cold starts where the solution would have been a heater in some form. Even then, imho the engine wear doesn't come from it purely being cold, it comes from whether there is oil lubricating the surfaces. To me, if anything, there should be oil priming systems which flow oil up through the block before starting, not heaters.
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2nd Dec 2016 10:23pm |
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