Hi all, many thanks for great feedback so far. I wasn't getting notification so assumed no one was interested, but here you all are.
The selection is definitely not for travelling around North America where, just as in Europe and Australasia, ordinary highway travel is straightforward.
"..I think the idea is for the book to recommend vehicles that could be purchased in North America, prepared for overlanding, and then shipped to another continent..."
Yes, or just driven down to Ushuaia (Darien Gap notwithstanding).
... In such circumstances, you would probably be doing 80% paved road, occasional dirt road and sometimes a bit more challenging off road, but nothing extreme.
Exactomundo. Too extreme in a fully-locked, 37" sense is just not worth the risk of stressing the vehicle that is your home for months. Life's complicated enough with a visa running out, the guts in freefall and water in the fuel. It's all more of a long-term travel thing.
All the variables about budget, accom, routes, season, and so on are addressed elsewhere in great detail but I'm looking for local NA knowledge about vehicle selection to attempt to make the publication genuinely useful to NA readers. Motorbikes are pretty similar the world over, but cars and trucks becomes a can or worms!
Thanks for the ExPo editorial links to Scott and Haven's articles. It was there all along but great to get others' feedback. And Scott that's a great list, thanks.
paulj, yes a cabin is as you describe - one of many words for 'living module'
'H1 hate' - I'd expect it in some places, even in the UK. I've even seen a similar attitude towards Range Rovers, tho for different reasons. Low profile is good, IMO and like someone else says of H1s, I can think of a few normal, village access tracks in Moroccan Atlas where the wheels would go over the edge.
Thanks for the tips on Nissan Frontier - had to look that one up along with 'Guard 1008'. Nissan pickups in the UK (3L TDs) would not be on my list but an early 80s Mercedes Station Wagon would be my choice of regular car. The problem is the good old stuff is either long exported to the places the books' aimed at - or has plain rusted away.
I'd guess what I'd take to Latin America is significantly different to what I would take elsewhere tho. Dont a lot of of US bangers end up there - or maybe old everything ends up there, so a good idea to buy old American?
Chris S