Vintage Rover pics

4Rescue

Expedition Leader
My last trip to Inverness we had a Conniston td5 110. Made tooling around Loch Ness and the Highlands a blast.

!!!!!????!!!!!! Small world aye. my Family is from Inverness and West Daviot... Were Davidsons. I always enjoy the fine vehicles in the lands I travel... some enjoy wine, me, can't stand the stuff. no it's all about old, oil smelling trucks and cars. Ahh the life.
 

DividingCreek

Explorer
!!!!!????!!!!!! Small world aye. my Family is from Inverness and West Daviot... Were Davidsons. I always enjoy the fine vehicles in the lands I travel... some enjoy wine, me, can't stand the stuff. no it's all about old, oil smelling trucks and cars. Ahh the life.

Crowther. Family is part of the McGregor Clan.
 

95RRC

Adventurer
kenya

pics
 

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blue bomber

Adventurer
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Rhodesian article in an old LIFE magazine
 

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Wow, thanks for the photos! I love the classic LR look and its utilitarian angle on how vehicles are supposed to be. The way cars are made today is kind of like a car owned by a man who was going insane and eventually lost his ability to drive - it was some two-door Cadillac that had two chandeliers hung from two hook poles attached to the front of the car somehow. It was a little strange at night to see that car moving very slowly on the shoulder... That's how odd it is to see modern cars today. The stuff in them just doesn't fit my idea of what it's supposed to be like.

That is what they were made for aye... Last time (actually every time) we were in Scotland visiting family my dad and I went out with a family friend and helped him shore up his paddocks for his sheep. I got to drive an old 109 clapped out as can be but still running well. It was super fun and I think the guy might have thought me a bit strange seeing as I was "enjoying physical labor" but in reality I was just enjoying the old Rover ;) ... Old Rovers in Englad are like old Jeeps here except we never used them as farm impliments QUITE to the extent the english did aye :D

I think it was the old IH Scouts that were doing that kind of work here in the States in the 60s. At least the ranchers and farmers were the target market in the rural areas and were equipped with PTO for farming implements.
 

TeriAnn

Explorer
Old pictures?

MarilynBig.jpg
Here is a Series I.



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Barbra Toy taking delivery of a brand new 1960 Dormobile from the Manufacturer prior to her next expedition.
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BToyDormie.jpg

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A group of Dormobiles on convoy stop in India


GRdia.jpg
In March of 1978 I towed home my new Green Rover, a 1960 109 pickup
For about 2 months it overlapped with my 1968 88, The Red Rover.

GRgoats.JPEG
About 3 years after the purchase of the Green Rover I switched to a full hard top. For 16 years she worked as a farm truck, carrying livestock, feed & manure.

GR_preDormi.jpg
I got the travel bug, sold the livestock so I could be away from home longer than part of one day
I was looking for camper improvements. In 1996 I purchased a badly damaged Dormobile kit that had been on a truck that was destroyed in an accident in Alaska. This picture was taken at the Palo Alto British car meet about 2 days after I got home with the kit. I still had not unloaded the Dormobile top

GRright98.JPEG
During the summer of 1997 The Green Rover was converted to a Dormobile using my newly repaired Dormobile kit.


 

nomadmatt

New member
Here's a couple of my old Sll... Although, the photos aren't that old at all!

-Matt
 

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Alaska Mike

ExPo Moderator/Eye Candy
Holy cow, that's pretty much the direction that my own 88 project is going, except with a full hard top. Very nice rig.

In a sea of Disco and Range Rover threads, this one is a proper shot of funk. Keep them coming.
 

TeriAnn

Explorer
Then there is Herbert Zipkin's 109 that he took all over Africa and Europe shooting travelogues for TV back in the early 1960's.


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TeriAnn

Explorer
Overland travel is not new to Americans. The most famous group called themselves the vagabonds. The group started as a 2 family car camping trip to the everglades in 1914. The Ford Family and the Edison family.

Starting 1915 the vagabond group was expanded to include John Burroughs, naturalist Luther Burbank, Harvey Firestone and occasionally, President Harding. The last Vagabond group car camping trip was in 1924 when the participants decided that they were drawing too much attention.

Gearing up was as simple as turning the pages of the 1927 Sears catalogue:

carbed1927Sears.jpg

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4Rescue

Expedition Leader
NOMADMATT: THat is one BEAUTY of a Rover there mate. Looks super clean but still "rough around the edges" like a real 4wd/work truck should be. SO do you still have it??? Even though I'm def. not a "Rover guy" for multiple reasons, that is one SWEET truck and if I owned it, it'd take a pretty dam special old truck to make me trade it/get rid of it... If you did get rid of it, I sure hope the new owner appreciates it cause it looks like you took your time and did it right. I've always thought that a Series Body married to a Toyota Mini-truck drivetrain and some smart "moderizations" such as some sound/tempreature dampening and a few others would make a pretty awesome truck. I'd LOVE to have a neat old Series 109 Hi-Cap Pick-up (if the combination even exists-or was the Hi-Cap just a Defender theng???) would be a sweet little run around truck, nothing too hardcore, just a neat old pick-up that is 90% purpose built for utility and 10% cool old truck style...

TERRIANN: I'm suprised nobody posted the pic of Marilyn Monroe... That's the first picture that comes to mind when I think "vintage rovers"

I'm also kinda suprised to not see any "1st Gen" Rangies... I think they might just be one of THE sexiest old "full bodied wagons" ever made. They're just so dam sexy looking aye. SO, I'll post up some of my favorites:
1832942.jpg
range-rover-classic-2-580x396.jpg
I know they're not technicaly "vintage pics" but they ARE pics of ultra sweet "Vintage rovers" so please forgive me :D
This thing just looks MINT aye...
!!11!!11!!DSC02925.JPG
I simply LOVE this old Ex-MOD truck. Don't know what it is, but all around this is one of my favorite LOOKING Defender/Series trucks. It just looks PERFECT for my taste.
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!DSC_0026xx.jpg
What can I say... KellyMoe's 130 could potentialy turn me into a "rover guy" were it mine (course I'd swing some Toyota gear underneath it ;)
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Nightmare%20gulch%20001.jpg
Like THIS... Pretty much the IDEAL Roverin a logical world: Cool old Rover looks, Toyota drivetrain durability and strength. Perfect combo and IMO the way EVERY series Rover should be "upgraded" I forget what series Cruiser the axles are from but they're a good improvement over stock to say the least aye.
IMG_2150.jpg
Don't know the story behind this one... but BOY someone spent some time and love to make it SUPER nice...
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And then there's Timm's truck that has apparently moved on to the "other coast" hopefully their road salt won't kill it cause it sure is an amazing truck.
pickuponrocks5.jpg

Wow, thanks for the photos! I love the classic LR look and its utilitarian angle on how vehicles are supposed to be. The way cars are made today is kind of like a car owned by a man who was going insane and eventually lost his ability to drive - it was some two-door Cadillac that had two chandeliers hung from two hook poles attached to the front of the car somehow. It was a little strange at night to see that car moving very slowly on the shoulder... That's how odd it is to see modern cars today. The stuff in them just doesn't fit my idea of what it's supposed to be like.



I think it was the old IH Scouts that were doing that kind of work here in the States in the 60s. At least the ranchers and farmers were the target market in the rural areas and were equipped with PTO for farming implements.

Yeah I was thinking about that after I posted that (Jeeps, Cruisers and IH's have this task here in AMerica - further proving that Toyota Landcruisers are a the top of the food chain when it comes to working vehicles ;) And unlike American trucks, you can still GET a real work truck from Toyota aye...) ... IH had SO many trucks that were meant straight up work horse aye. I remember a buddy's old Crew cab IH P/U (something that was pretty ahead of it's time considering back then nobody really made a real "quad cab") and what was really neat was that the stick shift being on the floor would get in the way of the middle passenger sitting on the front bench seat. Well you could pull a little pin and the stick would swivel over out of the way... pretty ingenoius. You could just tell that truck was made with the intention of hauling a crew of guys out to haul wood or hay or whatever... Something I think is REALLY missing in the Domestic FS market these days... REAL WORK TRUCKS. I'm not sure why a "work truck" should be more like our living rooms then a vehicle but then that's AMerica for you...

Anyway, back on toipic... sorry abvout that distraction and rambling...

Cheers

Dave
 
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TeriAnn

Explorer
NOMADMATT: THat is one BEAUTY of a Rover there mate. Looks super clean but still "rough around the edges" like a real 4wd/work truck should be. SO do you still have it???

He better still have it. I put in an entirely new custom wiring harness in that truck for Matt almost 2 years ago. Plus a bunch of us got together and helped on the mechanical bits. He is not allowed to get rid of that truck.



I'd LOVE to have a neat old Series 109 Hi-Cap Pick-up (if the combination even exists-or was the Hi-Cap just a Defender theng???)

The high capacity pickup with a separate bed and cab is a Defender thing. You just had versions of the 109 regular with pickup top. There is the One Ton version with a way more robust drive train that came stock with 35 inch dia tyres. But body wise it is still a 109 regular body style (long wheelbase 2 door). And of course you could get a 109 regular version of the Stage I with pickup top. V8, very beefy gearbox and very beefy drive train with full time 4WD.


I'm also kinda suprised to not see any "1st Gen" Rangies... I think they might just be one of THE sexiest old "full bodied wagons" ever made.

Then you have never seen the Land Rover tickford from the late 1940's

seriesIsw.JPEG

The Tickford looks like an early Willys station wagon.​

More pictures?

PRarkRanger.jpg
Early Park ranger lifting top.

PRdiagFront.jpg
Late Park Ranger lifting roof.

LRexplorer.jpg
The Land Rover Explorer. A US dealer option starting 1965. And a really bad idea considering how top heavy this beast must have been. I don't think it stayed on the price list very long.​

Since you like Range Rovers here is a Searle Carawagon:

rr_LRE.jpg

rrtable_LRE.jpg
Table where two people can sit inside and enjoy a meal or play cards across from one another.

rrcooker2.jpg
There is a fold forward two burner cooker. Stuck in traffic? Fix a nice hot cuppa tea while waiting.

rrbeds.jpg
And it sleeps 2 in the back!
 
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4Rescue

Expedition Leader
" Toyota tuff with Chevy stuff "
;)
??? No Shivvy junk in my Toyota... While it is certainly a somewhat common "american" mod it's hardly what has made and maintained Toyota's reputation but you tell yourself whatever you need to to make you belive they're all hype :rolleyes:

I'd be willing to bet that, while they seem common place in some parts of the states, Shivvy swapped Toyotas make up les then 1% of the Toyotas out there being the best there is...

So Terriann by your reasoning you drive a "fake" Rover then??? Funny, you decry putting Toyota parts in a Rover but it's perfectly "real" to run a domestic V8 and slushbox... I know you're a comitted "Roverphile" and that's great. You're a great wealth of knowledge when it comes to Rovers, and the board is better for it, but me thinks that you're a little full of "the koolaid" when it comes to realisticly admitting the major downfalls of Rovers.

Toyota didn't get it's reputation by simply having a bunch of armchair quarterbacks making stuff up on the internet. Knowing Toyotas are tougher, more reliable trucks for the most part then Rovers does NOT preclude me from ALSO really liking Rovers (hell I think I can safely say that OilWorkers's "Defender on Portals" is easily one of my top 5 or so favorite trucks ever regardless of the company who makes them... I think that if pressed I'd have a hard time sticking with my tried and true beliefs that the 70-series Cruiser is THE truck for me... I'd drive his rig in a HEARTBEAT and as you can tell I'm a pretty die-ahrd Toyota beliver- for many many reasons). They're neat old trucks with personality that shows in their boxy body's and their intended purpose of getting the job done and not carring how they look doing it. Hell in that respect Rovers and Toyotas are pretty dam simillar. I guess I'm just confused at where your bitterness towards Toyotas come from. Landcruisers/Mini trucks are every bit as utilitarian, every bit as "classic" and historicaly important as Rovers, possibly more so in alot of places. there are more folks then just me who think this. Some VERY knowledgable Rover guys (several of whom are members on this board too) have done exactly what I'm talking about and speak of it as if it should be considered a foregone conclusion. There's a guy with a Series truck on a Mini-truck DT here in the NW who has said over and over again that, after years of running stock Rover parts and fixing and replacing stock parts so many times, he finnaly just said forget it and swapped in a full 22RE Mini-truck D/T... He now has a truck with more power (scarry that a bone stock 22RE could ever be considered a "power upgrade" but) and that's far more capable of handling larger tires and tough trails. I fail to see how, in ANY way, swapping in tougher parts from ANY make, not just Toyota, can be a bad thing. Ever since the 4wd was invented I'd be willing to giess that people have been tossing out the week and replacing it with the strong. It's a simple formula that has nothing to do with brand loyalty. Rovers and Toyota just happen to be a match made in heaven. It's almost as if Rover intended to eventualy have their diffs/axles swapped for Toy parts seeing as it's so easy aye 9i relizer that it's an oversimplification but compared to simillar swaps with other makes/models it sure seems to be alot less work to put say 80-3rd members in a Disco housing). There is simply NO downside to it. Stronger diffs, factory Lockers are available and there's no weight penalty. Seems like a no brainer to me. Stock parts might be perfectly fine for a stock truck, but when you put those things to the test out in the bush I like to have a margin of "overbuilt" (whatever that means) saftey under my truck aye. Again, aside from being a 'snobby purist' i see no reason not to if you;re looking to gain strength and aftermarket options

Anyway, NOT the point of this thread so I'll get back OT.

That Tickford is SO COOL looking (the 1st Gen Rangie is still better looking and more of a "complete" vehicle versus the Tickford that, to me, looks like a mish mash of various different trucks/vehicles... don't get me wrong, I think the Tickford looks REALLY neat but I prefer the 1st Gen Rangie) , I've seen those around the UK/Scotland/Whales but I've never gotten to creep around one and look it over. Is it just a series truck with a custom coachwork body???

I love that Carawagon Rangie aye. That is something that I've always applauded Rover adn the Rover aftermarket for is all the neat purpose built "expo minded" models and conversions (like your dormobile - that is after market right, not a factory Rover configuration???)

And Terriann, despite my compete head slapping disbelief in your theory's above, I do appreciate you explaning the Hi-Cap thing to me. I wasn't sure about this that's why I posed the question. So when you refer to "the one ton version..." was that a Series truck??? A military version??? And what years would these have been available. Also were they only available in a P/U configuration, or could they be had in a wagon body as well??? I thought I had read somewhere that the "lightweights" were also 1-ton rated vehicles??? Maybe I'm just remembering wrong 9not the first second or last time THAT'S happened... hell it's not even teh first time TODAY it's happened ;) )

And yeah, that Series "camper" looks downright SCARRY... Seems like the guy who designed that went to a completely different school of thought then I did. I always thought a Vehicle, for stability sake, should be wider at the base then it is at the top. That thing is the complete oposite aye. Not to mention the fact that the Rover is ALREADY a very narrow truck so adding more weight up top and a body that is considerably wider then the actual truck coachwork is just plain scarry.

I'm trying to find the one picture I was thinking of. It's a relatively new picture of a member here in his Series Rover with no top or cage going through a nice little deep crevase (to use the term loosely) and the look on his face is a combination of child-like elation over simple pleasures and a very sin ister sneer like he's getting away with something... I love that truck if anyone knows the one I'm talking about... I think it's in a state of primer in terms of it's "color"...

Cheers

Dave
 
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