Took the D1 down to the Rover Owner's Association of Virginia (ROAV) Mid Atlantic Rally this past weekend so much of my time leading into that and since has been spent preparing for, executing, and recovering. More on that in the Coyote thread. I will say that running into folks from the board there was a great deal of fun-I'm still shocked people read this thread so getting face to face feedback on it was all the more entertaining, particularly with beer!
One thing I have noticed since being back is that my driveway has puddles in it (I'm living a bit further out in the VA countryside than the past few times in the area) and thus every time it rains the truck gets mud sprayed up the sides as I go to/from work. Now the mud is a nice shade that works well on the green exterior but I figured maybe it would be worth it to try out some mud flaps to cut back on unnecessary washings. The LR OE mud flaps seem ok but given that I wasn't sure about them, and am less sure they'll survive any wheeling or even winter, I wasn't spending a lot of $$$ on them. So I tried these fantastic Chinese copies off Amazon:
Mud flaps. Feedback from D3.uk and such indicated that they seemed to be old molds that someone grabbed and started stamping out on their own so expectations were low. I acknowledge that in some form or fashion I am sidestepping LR's 'intellectual property' but when it comes to mud flaps I say the more competition, the better...
So they showed up:
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Quality is adequate, as expected they show a lot of flashing likely from worn molds. The LAND ROVEF is a nice touch.
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The wife comes in and looks at the initial installation and says "did you really just wash the area right around where they were mounted and leave the rest?" "Yes, it's going to rain..."
She walks back out.
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As they sit now. A couple of reflections; you can see clearly in the back where I've now enabled the truck to only throw mud further back
:clapping:...brilliant.
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Whatever. The front's couldn't go on since the tube step/slider blocks their mounting. I contemplated drilling a big hole in the mud flap to see if I could make it work but that would be some trigonometry to get it all to line up so I'm calling the rear's alone as good enough. Truth be told if these rip off, break off, or I get tired enough of them I'll probably pull them off and either go with the rubber style that many on d3.uk advocate or just do without again.
*******break/break**********
A good time to highlight the public service announcement we all 'know' but may not resonate; while at MAR we were wheeling with a good mix of trucks including some LR3s, LR4s, and even a RRS that all did very well. While stopped in the middle of the ride to check out an old school house I started talking to an LR3 owner about his BFG KO2's and as we were looking at the tires an audible pop under the hood happened and white coolant smoke billowed out from under the bonnet...before it was even opened the question was "have you replaced your coolant tee?" The owner hadn't, and with an 08 that was at 100k...well, it is self evident that is what happened. Center of the picture is my buddy John, i.e. Twin Mountain Offroad from my sig line, jumping in with others to get the truck trail fixed by using a deep 1/4 socket after carefully removing all the plastic from both sides of the rubber tubing and then widening it a little. I need to remember to grab a couple of the brass barbed units from a hardware store since I think we'll see this quite often on the trail. If you haven't changed it...you will, somewhere!
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