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Driveline parts for Land Rover and Range Rover models, including propshafts, driveshafts, centre bearings, universal joints, CV joints, and Haldex couplings. Fitment varies by platform, shaft configuration, and driveline design across Series, Defender, Discovery, Freelander, and Range Rover. Stocked in our Dutch warehouse network for EU dispatch.
Collection Scope
This page covers driveline components that transfer torque from the transmission and transfer box to the axles and wheels: propshafts and driveshafts, universal joint kits, centre support bearings on two-piece shaft systems, CV joints and boots on independent-suspension applications, Haldex couplings on transverse-platform models, and the transfer-related parts that wear alongside them.
Terminology in this collection follows UK convention. Propshaft refers to the shaft running along the vehicle from the transfer box to the front or rear differential. Driveshaft refers to the axle-side shaft from the differential to the hub. The two wear differently and the parts are not interchangeable. Buyers searching for "drive shaft" on a Discovery 4 propshaft replacement will find the same physical part listed here under "propshaft".
Fitment ScopeDriveline parts in this collection span four generations of platform architecture, and the parts catalogue differs significantly between them.
Classic Land Rover (Series and Defender). Series 2, 2A and 3 use leaf-sprung solid axles with ball-and-socket swivels at the front. Propshafts run on universal joints with no CV joints in the system. Yoke series matters at the order stage: most Series and early Defender prop shafts use the 1300 yoke pattern, but later production and aftermarket replacements may use 1310. Confirm yoke series from the existing prop shaft before ordering UJ kits. Series 2 and 3 parts cover the classic mechanical driveline catalogue.
Discovery family. Discovery 1 through Discovery 4 use two-piece rear propshafts on most variants. The centre support bearing carries the shaft mid-length and is a known wear point on higher-mileage vehicles. The 2.7 TDV6 Discovery 3 (L319) and the 3.0 TDV6 Discovery 4 (also L319 chassis code but a separate generation with the 3.0 swap, not a facelift) share rear propshaft geometry on most variants but differ at the front. Confirm engine code (276DT or 306DT) before ordering front propshaft parts.
Freelander 1 and Freelander 2. Freelander 1 uses a viscous coupling unit at the rear. Freelander 2 (L359, 2006 to 2014) uses a Haldex Generation 3 coupling, which was the first application of Gen 3 ahead of Volvo and other licensees (Haldex Traction history). Haldex service parts on the FL2 are generation-specific: a Gen 4 pump or filter does not fit the Gen 3 unit. Cross-reference by part number from the existing coupling, not from the chassis code alone.
Range Rover and Range Rover Sport. The L320 Sport (2005 to 2013) shares the IBF platform with the Discovery 3, so front and rear propshaft components overlap on most variants. The L405 Range Rover (2013 to 2022) and L494 Range Rover Sport share the D7u aluminium platform with the Discovery 5 L462, with shared propshaft architecture on diesel variants. The Range Rover L405 parts collection carries the model-wide catalogue.
Pre-Purchase ChecksDriveline parts are commonly mis-ordered on fitment rather than on quality. Five checks before placing an order reduce that risk to near zero.
On the Freelander 2, replace the Haldex oil and pre-charge pump filter together as a single service. Replacing the pump in old, contaminated oil is the leading cause of premature pump failure on the Gen 3 unit.
Four mistakes appear repeatedly in driveline part returns. None of these are repair-side mistakes; they are pre-purchase fitment mistakes.
On Series 2, 2A and 3 prop shafts, the yoke pattern is the controlling dimension for UJ kit ordering. Measure the cup diameter at the existing UJ before ordering. A 1300 series UJ kit fits a yoke designed for 1300 series caps and nothing else.
Driveline replacement on a Land Rover or Range Rover usually exposes adjacent components that fail under the same operating conditions. Three pairings come up consistently in workshop practice.
For diagnostic detail before ordering, the following guides cover the symptom and inspection side of driveline work.
Covers vibration, clunking, CV boot wear and centre bearing symptoms across Discovery 4, Freelander 2 and Series 3.
Land Rover driveshaft, propshaft and driveline problemsCovers Haldex generation differences, rear diff noise and the parts that resolve each.
Freelander 2 common faults, fixes and modificationsCovers AWD driveline repair cost expectations alongside other ownership-cost categories.
Discovery 4 vs Discovery Sport maintenance costsIn UK terminology, the propshaft runs along the length of the vehicle and transfers drive from the transfer box to the front or rear differential. The driveshaft runs from the differential outward to the wheel hub. On classic Series and Defender models, both ends of the system use universal joints. On independently suspended models such as Freelander 2, Discovery 3 onwards and Range Rover Sport, the axle-side driveshafts use CV joints to accommodate suspension and steering movement.
Most Discovery 1, Discovery 2, Discovery 3, Discovery 4 and Td5-era Defender rear propshafts are two-piece with a centre support bearing carrying the shaft mid-length. Series 2, 2A and 3 and most early classic Defenders use a one-piece shaft. The centre support bearing is a known wear point on higher-mileage two-piece installations.
The Freelander 2 (2006 to 2014, chassis code L359) was the first vehicle to receive Haldex Generation 3 ahead of subsequent Volvo, Saab and Ford applications. The Gen 3 unit ran across the full production run. Verify by reading the part number stamped on the coupling itself rather than working from the chassis code alone, since Haldex service parts (pre-charge pump, filter, oil) are generation-specific and Gen 4 components do not fit a Gen 3 unit.
There is no scheduled replacement interval for the propshaft assembly itself. Universal joints and the centre support bearing wear progressively with mileage and load (towing accelerates wear on both). Symptoms typically appear from around 120,000 km onwards on Discovery 3 and Discovery 4 production, earlier on tow-heavy vehicles. Inspect during any service that requires removing the shaft.
Not reliably. Series 2, 2A and 3 prop shafts may use either 1300 or 1310 yoke series UJs depending on production date and replacement history. Measure the existing UJ cap diameter and snap-ring style before ordering. Ordering by chassis number alone is the most common cause of returned UJ kits on classic-era vehicles.
Yes, where available. The L405 (2013 to 2022) and the Range Rover Sport L494 share the D7u aluminium platform with the Discovery 5 L462, and propshaft architecture overlaps on diesel variants. Confirm fitment from the existing part number rather than from chassis code alone, as several variants exist within the L405 production run.
Updated: 17 May 2026