Around the World in 80 Years

Hello, everyone;

This is my first post here, so I'll introduce myself and give a little info on what I'm getting ready to do. My name is Steve, and I live in western Washington, on the Olympic Peninsula. I've had the travel bug since I first went overseas in my 20s; if I didn't have responsibilities here, I'd probably sell everything I own and travel full-time. The only thing that I don't like is cramming my six feet, two inches onto buses, into taxis, onto the backs of tiny motorcycles, etc. Every trip I take, my knees, neck, back, and I always wish we had our own vehicle.

A few years ago I saw a show about some people who want to build a bridge across the Bering Strait, and that got me thinking about driving around the world. I originally thought I might do it after I retire, but I'm only 32 and I don't think I can wait that long. Then I saw a Unimog one day and was fascinated by it, did some research, and came across some of the massive expedition RVs I'm sure you've all seen. The price tag had me thinking after retirement again, but in the meantime I bought a Ford Ranger in Nicaragua and drove around through cane fields, across rivers, through swamps, etc., and realized that the big expedition vehicles wouldn't make it into a lot of the places I was going. The Ranger was also pretty inadequate; I did all kinds of damage to it. I sold it and went back into research mode.

I had been seeing a lot of Land Cruiser pickups in Central America, and fell in love with their boxy, utilitarian looks. They were still too expensive, but I could dream, right? I did more research, looked at offroad van conversions and all kinds of different setups, but I kept coming back to the FJ40, which I concluded would be the best vehicle to do what I want to do -- drive all over the world a few weeks at a time, until I'm dead, too crippled to drive, or just not into it anymore.

For starters, I'm planning to pick up a diesel FJ40 in Costa Rica and drive it back here, sort of zig-zagging through Central America and Mexico. Back home, I'll do some work on it, take some trips inside North America, and after that, probably head south again. When possible, I want to leave the vehicle with friends and fly home, then go back and continue on from where I left off. Obviously there's some risk in doing that, which is one reason I don't want to dump tens of thousands of dollars into the vehicle. The other reason is I don't have that much money. I'm not looking so much to travel the globe in a state of the art, high-tech expedition vehicle, but more to travel the globe in a relatively low-tech vehicle that's as old as me or maybe a few years older, with a few modern upgrades.

Any advice from you more experienced Land Cruiser expedition people would be greatly appreciated; like I said, I'm taking a learn as I go approach, so while I've spent a few years researching and I have some experience driving the Pan-American Highway, I've never done it in an older vehicle. I'm also not much of a mechanic, so I'll be learning that, too, but I figure in most places in the world, there's going to be someone around that can fix an FJ40 if I can't.

Thanks in advance for your guidance.
 

RAM5500 CAMPERTHING

OG Portal Member #183
Welcome To The Portal! I look forward to following your travels!

wherethehelldidiputmykeys said:
I'm planning to pick up a diesel FJ40 in Costa Rica and drive it back here, sort of zig-zagging through Central America and Mexico. .

Please let me know if you want some company on this trip!

We will be doing the same thing (different trucks :D ) next year!
 

Martyn

Supporting Sponsor, Overland Certified OC0018
Welcome to the Portal.

Take some time in researching bringing a non US vehicle into the USA. There are many regulations and hurdles to pass. Start by looking at the DOT and NHTSA sites, or doing a search for importing a vehicle into the USA.
 
I called Customs and double-checked, and for vehicles over 25 years old, you just fill out a form at the border and pay 2.5% duty. They aren't held to the same standards as newer vehicles. If anyone has done this research and thinks I'm missing something here, please let me know.

I just wish I was going to have more time; I only have a few weeks to cover about 6,000 miles. I don't have a firm deadline, but my dogs will be pretty upset if I'm gone too long. I'm probably going to fly down there in a few weeks to make the purchase; my friend who lives down there will drive the vehicle for the next few months, hopefully uncovering and fixing any problems with it before we start the trip in late July.

Also, I should have said BJ40, not FJ40 -- like I said, learning as I go.
 

zimm

Expedition Leader
theres a link with a great looking fj43 for sale on here somewheres. that extra couple feet of space looks worth it for a long trip. swap in a 6hole toy diesel, and thats one fly adventure wagon.
 

Awkragt

Adventurer
Did you ever end up taking the trip? Also vehicles in costa rica are generally double what they would be in the US. Costa Rica has an 80% import tax on vehicles over 5 years old. Not sure what this does for the 30 year old vehicle prices.
 

4Rescue

Expedition Leader
theres a link with a great looking fj43 for sale on here somewheres. that extra couple feet of space looks worth it for a long trip. swap in a 6hole toy diesel, and thats one fly adventure wagon.
Yep I was just thinking that... If I were gonna bring back a Cruiser from another Country I'd be looking @ a 43 or 45-Troupy (or an early 75Series Troupy ;) ) The extra W/B is usualy a great thing for most terrain and you can sleep inside it. The BJ43 is simillar in dimension to my 1st Gen 4Runner. Perfect for sleeping in back of when needed. The BJ40??? Yeah not so much W/O some serious ingenuity and home building... Not something you can easily do unless you've got family and a garage down there somewhere that you can use... Just food for thought mate.

Welcome to the portal and have fun on your adventures. Sounds like a great trip with a nice "coming home" present (your hard to find in NA Diesel Cruiser) eh :D

Cheers

Dave

EDIT: WOW I REALLY should check the original post dates on some of these threads... Oh well I'm an idiot, what's new... hopefully you went on the trip eh??? What'd you bring back of so???
 

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