Superpanga
Active member
Camped next to a guy this week with a sweet Mahindra jeep which he has made street-legal. He was enjoying the hell out of it!
Definitely worth considering. You could easily spend many months in just India and you would only see a small fraction of the fabulous forts, palaces and temples that are there, not to mention the wild tigers, elephants, rhinos and other interesting species. I've probably spent four months of road trip time in total in the past 3 years years exploring parts of maybe 5 Indian states. I haven't really covered those states well and I've got a bunch more states to cover. Nepal is fascinating too, I've only spent a few weeks road tripping around that country and I've only covered a small part of it. I probably wouldn't do Pakistan, but the "Beating Retreat" ceremony at the Attari (Pakistan)/Wagah (India) border is not to be missed. I'd like to do Myanmar (Burma) someday, but there was just another military coup there so maybe that's not such a good idea anymore. South Asia is a fascinating place and very under-appreciated here.I'm loving all these photos!
When borders open up again you're giving me an idea to fly to India and buy one of these things then roam that part of the world for months and months before selling it again.
It will negate the need for a carnet and all the shipping hassle. Having a sweet turbo diesel that gets awesome mileage would be great too!
Hmmmmm..
-Dan
I would guess it's due to lack of awareness. Most people in the U.S. don't know much about India and I'm sure they don't know anything about these cool Mahindras. It's kind of a shame, with Indians playing such a large role in our country (our VP, several members of congress, thousands of doctors and software engineers, etc.), I believe we all should know more about India and Indians. India is an amazing country and we could learn a lot from Indian culture. I am a much better person because of my decades-long association with Indians and India.Hey jscherb, these are really cool. I'm curious, is there a reason we never see these imported as antiques into the US like we do old land rovers? Is it the stigma of lower quality (ha, lower than a land rover??) Lack of awareness? Or is it that older models are so used up that they aren't worth the cost to ship?
I could totally see having a commander as a camping vehicle, or a pikUp to putt around and run chores. Sort of related, if I didn't have an early cj-5, I'd have a Roxor.
Long before there was an AEV Brute or a Gladiator, there was the Mahindra Pik-Up. This nice example belongs to the municipal government of Simla, a town in the Himalayan foothills that in British Raj times was the summer capital of India.
Importing one wouldn't be hard or terribly expensive (the biggest cost would be a shipping container from India to here, the Mahindra itself would probaby only be a few thousand bucks), but getting parts in the U.S. would be a big problem. Later in the thread I'll talk about what I'm thinking about importing and how I would deal with the parts problem.
Oh man if this were an extended cab like the old rangers, that would be a perfect sized rig.
You're very welcome. I'm just getting started, lots more models and photos to post.Jscherb, thanks for posing these! I am really enjoying seeing how the Jeep DNA evolved in India.