Figured I'd jump on this page as I think it's more active than landroversonly is and seems more geared towards overlanding which is what I'm interested in doing and have been doing with my Disco since I got it in February. Got it from my uncle after he'd had it in and out of various shops for a few years getting the ARB bumper stolen at one point and then later recovered and he just wasn't enjoying it so he offered it to me if I came and picked it up from his yard.
When I first got it, it hadn't been run in over a year and the front bumper was off it and it was a tinge of green after sitting outside in WA for a year not being washed. Pressure washed all the green off it and brought it back to being the factory white. Had to buy a new starter for it as the one in it was seized. Got it to turn over slowly with the new starter and had had the batteries on chargers for awhile but they were old and had sat discharged for awhile. New batteries, put some fuel in the line going to the mechanical lift pump and got it fired with the help of some starting fluid.
Then I had to take care of actually getting it registered and while I waited for that to get processed I picked up some grade 8 hardware and mounted the bumper back up. Drove it around for awhile, discovered a rear shock was broken so I replaced both rears with OME units. Took it on it's breakin camping trip with some friends in the snow and it did great. No issues and even the next morning when it was below freezing it fired right up no problem. Didn't even need starting fluid.
It ran great for awhile just driving it around town running errands and whatnot. Took it across the pass and over to Idaho for a ski trip at the beginning of March. That was quite the adventure. The day I tried to leave I had my right from caliper seize and actual break off it's mounts and rip the rubber brake line too. I ended up stuck in Idaho for an extra 2 days while I waited on Les Schwab to get calipers in stock and fix my front brakes for me. Normally I would have done it myself but I didn't have the tools to get it done with me so it was easier to just have them do it. Finally got on the road and about an hour after passing through Spokane I started to smell the tell tale sweet smell of coolant so I started to pull over and as I checked to make sure no one was behind me I saw the big cloud of smoke come out. Got pulled over and looked in the coolant reservior and it was all milky. Turns out it'd thrown the PS and Alt belts which also drive the water pump causing it to overheat and due to the location of my gauge it didn't show till too late. Got it towed to the next town and got my dad to drive over the pass and pick me up so I could then come back later with a truck and trailer to retrieve it.
Got it back home, got permission from my grandpa to use his barn for the teardown and rebuild and had the whole top end of the engine apart in about 4 hours and then was on my way to the machine shop with the heads to get them resurfaced. Took 3 afternoons to put it back together as I was working slowly to make sure I didn't screw anything up. Got it all back together and it fired up after purging all the air out of the fuel lines by cranking it with the glow plugs removed so it wasn't fighting compression. Put a few more miles on it around town locally to make sure all was set before I went too far from home with it.
Once I was satisfied with it I took it across the mountains again to Cle Elm and Ellensburg for a 3 day weekend trip with friends camping in 2 different spots and exploring the outskirts of Ellensburg. Lost the bendix drive on the starter but luckily because it's manual we towed me up a hill and I just used momentum to compression start the engine the second morning. On the way back home we went a bit slower over the mountains as I was running a bit hotter than I had on the way over. Didn't get a chance to investigate it more but I think it was the fins of the radiator being filled with dust affecting the heat transfer of it.
When I first got it, it hadn't been run in over a year and the front bumper was off it and it was a tinge of green after sitting outside in WA for a year not being washed. Pressure washed all the green off it and brought it back to being the factory white. Had to buy a new starter for it as the one in it was seized. Got it to turn over slowly with the new starter and had had the batteries on chargers for awhile but they were old and had sat discharged for awhile. New batteries, put some fuel in the line going to the mechanical lift pump and got it fired with the help of some starting fluid.
Then I had to take care of actually getting it registered and while I waited for that to get processed I picked up some grade 8 hardware and mounted the bumper back up. Drove it around for awhile, discovered a rear shock was broken so I replaced both rears with OME units. Took it on it's breakin camping trip with some friends in the snow and it did great. No issues and even the next morning when it was below freezing it fired right up no problem. Didn't even need starting fluid.
It ran great for awhile just driving it around town running errands and whatnot. Took it across the pass and over to Idaho for a ski trip at the beginning of March. That was quite the adventure. The day I tried to leave I had my right from caliper seize and actual break off it's mounts and rip the rubber brake line too. I ended up stuck in Idaho for an extra 2 days while I waited on Les Schwab to get calipers in stock and fix my front brakes for me. Normally I would have done it myself but I didn't have the tools to get it done with me so it was easier to just have them do it. Finally got on the road and about an hour after passing through Spokane I started to smell the tell tale sweet smell of coolant so I started to pull over and as I checked to make sure no one was behind me I saw the big cloud of smoke come out. Got pulled over and looked in the coolant reservior and it was all milky. Turns out it'd thrown the PS and Alt belts which also drive the water pump causing it to overheat and due to the location of my gauge it didn't show till too late. Got it towed to the next town and got my dad to drive over the pass and pick me up so I could then come back later with a truck and trailer to retrieve it.
Got it back home, got permission from my grandpa to use his barn for the teardown and rebuild and had the whole top end of the engine apart in about 4 hours and then was on my way to the machine shop with the heads to get them resurfaced. Took 3 afternoons to put it back together as I was working slowly to make sure I didn't screw anything up. Got it all back together and it fired up after purging all the air out of the fuel lines by cranking it with the glow plugs removed so it wasn't fighting compression. Put a few more miles on it around town locally to make sure all was set before I went too far from home with it.
Once I was satisfied with it I took it across the mountains again to Cle Elm and Ellensburg for a 3 day weekend trip with friends camping in 2 different spots and exploring the outskirts of Ellensburg. Lost the bendix drive on the starter but luckily because it's manual we towed me up a hill and I just used momentum to compression start the engine the second morning. On the way back home we went a bit slower over the mountains as I was running a bit hotter than I had on the way over. Didn't get a chance to investigate it more but I think it was the fins of the radiator being filled with dust affecting the heat transfer of it.
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