New-ish member here, but I've been into this kind of thing for quite a while. Here is the Scout II I've own for just over 30 years now. Before this I owned a little Subaru 4x4 Wagon, my first car. Wrote about it here in the 'show us your Subaru' thread.
The Scout's got a 345 V8, 4speed manual, Dana300 TC. Front locker, rear Powr-Lok LSD. Pretty standard. Good fourwheeler, great for camping. It's served me well. My only complaint about it, other than it not getting the best gas mileage, is that it's kinda noisy on the freeway. I blame that mostly on the mud terrain tires and wind noise from all the stuff I have on the roof. I have a sound-meter iPhone app and it measures ~80 dB at the 70 mph. Not great, but I still love this truck after all these years. It's more at home on secondary and dirt highways with slower speeds. Less noise, better fuel economy, on the paved roads anyway.
Main gas tank holds 20 gal. And I've set up the roof rack to carry two NATO gas cans in flip-up cages for easy siphoning of their gas into the main tank. No world traveling for me yet though. My excursions have not strayed beyond the American Southwest.
SOME PICTURES
Death Valley trip, Feb 2014, just came out of Panamint Valley here, through Goler Wash and over Megal Pass. Note the two flat mounted green gas cans on the rack plus one 5-gal plastic can. Gas stations in those parts are few and far between:
Random desert camping trip a while back:
Newer additions, traction boards plus an Ironman awning:
The Scout's got a 345 V8, 4speed manual, Dana300 TC. Front locker, rear Powr-Lok LSD. Pretty standard. Good fourwheeler, great for camping. It's served me well. My only complaint about it, other than it not getting the best gas mileage, is that it's kinda noisy on the freeway. I blame that mostly on the mud terrain tires and wind noise from all the stuff I have on the roof. I have a sound-meter iPhone app and it measures ~80 dB at the 70 mph. Not great, but I still love this truck after all these years. It's more at home on secondary and dirt highways with slower speeds. Less noise, better fuel economy, on the paved roads anyway.
Main gas tank holds 20 gal. And I've set up the roof rack to carry two NATO gas cans in flip-up cages for easy siphoning of their gas into the main tank. No world traveling for me yet though. My excursions have not strayed beyond the American Southwest.
SOME PICTURES
Death Valley trip, Feb 2014, just came out of Panamint Valley here, through Goler Wash and over Megal Pass. Note the two flat mounted green gas cans on the rack plus one 5-gal plastic can. Gas stations in those parts are few and far between:
Random desert camping trip a while back:
Newer additions, traction boards plus an Ironman awning: