yellocoyote
Adventurer
Poughkeepsie Gulch?
I was fortunate to run that in my KJ Liberty. Excellent!
Ot it could be from when it was introduced and the Land Rover "display" trip in a central american jungle. The air suspension failed, the LR3 couldn't manage the terrain and had to be towed out.I think half of the bad reputation was inherited from the Discos and the P38.
I would personally never want to be on air on an expedition without back up springs and the ability to change it on the fly. Air is amazing when it works, but makes recovery extremely hard in remote areas.
:Wow1:Land Rover has never built a vehicle as versatile as the LR3
And if it's your compressor that's dead?But quite easy to deal with. A spare set of bags with short lines going to schreader fittings to be manually filled from your compressor isn't an unreasonable spare.
And if it's your compressor that's dead?
True, but even those can die (ask me how I know). I think you can probably travel further over bad terrain on low tire pressure than you can sitting on bumpstops.Any reasonable traveler would have additional air service available for tires.
True, but even those can die (ask me how I know). I think you can probably travel further over bad terrain on low tire pressure than you can sitting on bumpstops.
In any case, my point isn't that a person should or shouldn't depend on something, rather to think about consequences and how to handle them when those somethings do fail.
How much weight you put on those choices is a personal matter and is also, IMO, dependent on how many vehicles you travel with and where you're traveling. If you're traveling solo, especially in places with little to no modern service facilities, most people would, hopefully, give it more consideration.
Different people have different priorities in choice of vehicle. For some, performance in Moab like places might be an important factor. For others, it might be near the bottom of the list of important factors.
That's a common argument, too bad it's never made with any thought.Holy ****,
Well then, what do you do when you have a complete engine failure on the trail?
Transmission line busts?
Oil cooler line bust
Transmission fails
5 flats
Computer failure
That's a common argument, too bad it's never made with any thought.
All vehicles have the potential for engine, transmission & tire failure.
Some add oil cooler lines, some also add transmission lines, some also add computers.
The more items you add that can immobilize you the more opportunity you have for immobilization.
1. Pick a vehicle you like
2. Maintain it the best you can
3. Perform only critical modifications - limit changes to factory systems, especially the motor.
4. Carry spares for known/common failure modes
Then just go! I drove a vehicle we bought in the UK sight unseen nearly the entire length of the Silk Road. We had all of the appropriate maintenance done and had the dealership inspect the truck completely, then we just left and left the rest to chance. Breakdowns really can be part of the fun of travel.