Get your tickets to THE BIG THING 2026!
kcowyo said:I'll accept a RM funnel cake or a coffee from Winston at Mobius, for my speedy service.
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silverton62 said:Winston bailed...
silverton62 said:I was going spring over UNTIL I decided I wanted my truck as the Expedition Rig, and load carry ability means more to me than rock crawling ability. I want to get a lifetime of travel out of my trucks, and I think Old Man Emu Heavy, for my INTENT is the answer.
I love the look of the Big sprung over Toyota LandCruiser, and will do it someday to a different truck, when I stop driving to other countries .
silverton62 said:Yes I like these but I am hoping to find a bigger bladder that will hold the 30/40 gallons or so I want to carry, low. I appreciate the help!
jfm_stl said:One advantage of distributing your water over several containers is that you're no left in a lurch if one is compromised.
Jim
silverton62 said:and my hot water shower system for girlfriend
kcowyo said:I'll accept a RM funnel cake or a coffee from Winston at Mobius, for my speedy service.
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gjackson said:Mike,
First, welcome to ExPo.
Well, not quite; I've only had my truck since 2003! But I know what you mean, large racks on Rovers are very common in the overlanding world. A few points from me, which do reiterate some of the above:
1. As said before, you want to put as little weight up high as possible. My 110 has a lot more up high than I like, but I accept that as a limitation to where I can go
2. Obviously you need a rack; roof tent, kayaks etc.
3. Your goal should be to keep the rack itself as light as you can while still maintaining the strength for what you need to carry. Think light materials; expanded metal flooring is very heavy. A lot of people use the plastic flooring from animal kennels, light and weather proof. Go with the lightest gauge metal you can get away with for the rack structure; the main weakness of the rack will be it flexing, rather than the weight you put on it.
4. Be careful with your mounting system. On the 110 pictured, I have a full cage that is mounted to the frame and doesn't touch the body anywhere. The rack is attached to that. Avoid splitting mounting between the frame and the body as this will just result in stressed and broken parts. The body does move significantly compared to the frame.
I've included a couple of pics that might give you some ideas. Good luck!
cheers
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