The Rolling Restoration & Customization Of My 88' Range Rover Classic

Snagger

Explorer
I can't do any more than sympathise over your electrical head scratching. I had the same sort of problems a few days ago adding the aircon engine and compressor wiring from a '96 Discovery to my soft dash RRC - while the hardware is the same, the Discovery wiring was different as it was changed in 96. Thankful;ly, I have a mechanic friend who is used to the LR "electrical troubleshooting manuals" for the 95 RRC and the 96 Discovery that I was able to borrow from my local specialist.

Taking the dash out was more un-nerving to me than rebuilding engines or transmissions. Now I feel comfortable in my desire to do a full rebuild, though without any more mods. I think I'll copy your use of Lizzard Skin on the interior of the shell, once it has been blasted, repaired and hot zinc sprayed. Still, all of that is years away - I'm going to have to save long and hard first. :(

Great to see more progress on yours, though.
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
Ok that may have been a useless attempt! If you look at the images with a smart phone, you can zoom right up to what you are looking for. I'm a bit stunned that they were able to fit 3-1/2 pages of text onto 2pages of schematics!
But that's all that's in this book, and it must be at least 3" thick!
Hope it helps :)

repete,
I thought I had thoroughly gone through the the same 3" thick manual well enough to say that there was nothing in there, but apparently not! I truly appreciate your help! Since electrical is not my strong area my brother came down and helped me with wiring the ignition in and the pictures you posted were of GREAT help and we were very glad that we had them. Thank you very much!


I can't do any more than sympathise over your electrical head scratching. I had the same sort of problems a few days ago adding the aircon engine and compressor wiring from a '96 Discovery to my soft dash RRC - while the hardware is the same, the Discovery wiring was different as it was changed in 96. Thankful;ly, I have a mechanic friend who is used to the LR "electrical troubleshooting manuals" for the 95 RRC and the 96 Discovery that I was able to borrow from my local specialist.

Taking the dash out was more un-nerving to me than rebuilding engines or transmissions. Now I feel comfortable in my desire to do a full rebuild, though without any more mods. I think I'll copy your use of Lizzard Skin on the interior of the shell, once it has been blasted, repaired and hot zinc sprayed. Still, all of that is years away - I'm going to have to save long and hard first. :(

Great to see more progress on yours, though.

Snagger,
I too shared the same opinion about being un-nerved by the dash electrics and thinking the mechanical side was easier because there is a ton of wires in the dash area but now that I have been through everything, its not scary at all anymore; just confusing sometimes...lol. I know I will win in the end, its just a matter of how long its going to take me to get there. ;)


I couldn't agree more about the "little things" making all the difference. :)

Craig,

I am glad you agree. I have spent quite a while getting the little things right and I am really looking forward to seeing the whole package when it is all back together. :)
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
Status Update...

Alright, so I have some good news and some bad news....I will give you the good news first. The good news is that my brother and I got the late model column in and the ignition working with the earlier style wiring harness. As it sits now, I am a day away from having it back together and driving.

The bad news is that "life" got in the way again. Last Monday I was in my truck on my way to school. While I was sitting at a red light, I was rear-ended by someone doing I am thinking around 35-40MPH. My back, neck, and head have been hurting quite a bit and not feeling like they are in working order since the crash, although my neck and head are on the lesser end of that scale (its mainly my back). The damage to my truck seemed like it could be teatering on the side of my truck being "totaled" by the insurance company but thankfully it sounds like they are going to fix it.
Since last Monday I have been trying to rest up and recuperate while fielding phone call after phone call, going to the doctor, dealing with the rental vehicle stuff, dealing with school related stuff, easter dinner with the family, etc.; as well as, my girlfriend is deploying again in three weeks. So even though I am only a day away from having my Rover back together its going to be quite awhile before I am able to work on it.

No matter how much I love my Rover and want to get it done...my health, my loved ones, and my schooling have got to come first. Hopefully I will be able to get back to working on it sometime next month when things have calmed down and I am hoping my back and neck will be doing better.

I am really sorry everyone.

I hope you are all doing well.

Thank you.

Jon

P.S.

Here are the pictures of the damage to my truck. When the fellow hit me it tucked my bumper underneath, picked the back end up, and pushed me forward into the intersection. It also shifted the truck bed toward the cab.

P1030175.JPGP1030176.JPGP1030179.JPGP1030183.jpgP1030184.jpgP1030185.jpgP1030186.jpg
 

Series1Rangie

Adventurer
Jon,

I hope you get the medical issues figured out, and the ins fixes your p/u. I am sure that you will have lots of garage time while your GF is deployed (may she stay safe). Now, get yourself better, I need my fix! :)

Mike
 

repete

Observer
That really sucks about your truck. Glad your ok! Feel free to pm me if you need more schematics, or anything else.
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
Jon,

I hope you get the medical issues figured out, and the ins fixes your p/u. I am sure that you will have lots of garage time while your GF is deployed (may she stay safe). Now, get yourself better, I need my fix! :)

Mike

At least you're OK. Sorry to hear the news, though.

That really sucks about your truck. Glad your ok! Feel free to pm me if you need more schematics, or anything else.

Glad you're oaky man!

I genuinely want to thank you guys for your kind words. I sincerely appreciate it. Your comments really did help. Truly, thank you very much!
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
Status Update 9/5/2012

To all of the wonderful ladies and gentlemen who have been following my build thread. I am sincerely sorry for such a long absence/hiatus and I truly want to thank you for your patience. I honestly had no intention of being gone for so long.
The “give it a week and you should be back to 100%” that my doctor originally told me fell a little short of the actual time it took me to get back to 100%. It ended up taking five weeks before I was back to 100% working order. As you might imagine, that length of time wreaked havoc with my schedule and life in general.
When that five week delay was combined with double the normal class load for school, the backed up workload from having to take time off work, being a groomsmen in a very close friends wedding, and then having to pack up/move my girlfriends entire apartment into a storage facility in a short amount of time (because they increased her rent by $350 a month, which was a 45% increase) right after she deployed. I ended up putting both the Rover and sleep on the wish list of things I would like to do when I get some rest time.
Thankfully, I managed to get good grades in all of those classes, caught back up at work, had a fantastic time at both the bachelor party and the wedding, and succeeded in moving her whole apartment into that storage facility without breaking anything.
I also made Expedition Portal my homepage so that I could sneak in a few minutes of surfing the forums here and there to help ease the stress and vicariously live through all of you and your stories, write-ups, and pictures. I owe everyone a BIG thank you for posting so much interesting stuff and so many good ideas! I learned a great deal from all of you and picked up quite a few ideas for mods I will do in the future!

After the accident, the other insurance company did have my truck fixed, which went very smoothly. The settlement and rental car however, did not go as smoothly. The claim took many months to settle and in fact was not completely settled until last week. In regards to the rental truck…I did not learn until after the fact that the rental truck was covered under my insurance because I pay for full coverage. Why is this important to know you might be wondering?
Well, it is important for a couple of reasons. The first reason being the fact that I DID NOT have to purchase the rental insurance from the rental company at all because it is coverage by my regular insurance (as long as I pay for full coverage). The second reason this is important to know is because the other insurance company will not reimburse me for the rental insurance that I DID NOT have to purchase because it is covered by my insurance. If I did not have full coverage, they would have reimbursed me.
So if I can offer any advice to you, it would be to check your coverage BEFORE something happens, because in all of the confusion of reporting the accident, dealing with the insurance, and dealing with the body shop, I didn’t even think to ask about my insurance covering the rental car. Hindsight is 20/20 and exercising a little common sense before hand would have saved me $300. Lesson learned. I am now reviewing ALL of my various insurance contracts with a “fine tooth comb” (as the saying goes).

I wanted to pass on my learning experience so that hopefully it would benefit others in the future but also because I had a question to ask all of you out there… first, a little back story to help you understand where I am coming from when I ask the question.

A few months before my car accident, my brother was in an accident as well. He was in his 1992 RRC and someone backed into him in a parking lot. It bent the bumper, broke his taillight lens, and bent his drivers side rear quarter panel a little bit. There was no structural damage at all, just three pretty easily replaced or straightened pieces were damaged. HOWEVER, his insurance company was going to total his Rover just for that small bit of easily repairable damage. The real kicker though, is that they only wanted to give him $2500 for his very nice RRC, which he has over $10K in.
Very fortunately for him, after two months of fighting with his insurance company and only being able to produce receipts for about $6500 of the amount he has in his RRC, someone in our area posted another RRC on Craigslist for $6300, which was pretty much the twin of his RRC.
After producing receipts for $6500 spent on his RRC within the year and a half before the accident, the insurance company only increased their offer to $3000 and said “well we have to account for depreciation”, he finally told them that if they really wanted total his car for that little bit of damage they could buy him the RRC that was on Craigslist for $6300 (it was the same color, spec, and right around the same mileage).
After that, they readily agreed to fix his RRC. He did the labor himself and it only cost $500 in total. After having to go through all of that fighting with his insurance company and getting it fixed, he decided he didn’t want to have to fight with them again and wanted to sell his RRC all together.

Having just watched him go through all of that and having gone through my own bad experience with insurance companies, I am now VERY nervous about taking my RRC out on the road until it has proper coverage. In total, throughout the four years and various depths of restoration on my Rover, I now have over 1500 hours of work into my RRC and a fair bit more money into my Rover than my brother does into his.
Even now before I put on the many “add-ons” which are awaiting install, the value of my RRC is still disproportionate to the current market value. When I do get all those extra bits installed, the value difference will be even more disproportionate to the market value. This poses a very troubling issue for me.

Just to clarify, I don’t ever plan on selling my Rover (which is why I have such a RIDICULOUS amount of time and money into it) but the fact remains, that there are other very unfortunate ways, which are beyond my control that could take it from me.
For instance, if I had been on time with my self-imposed deadlines on the Rover, it would have been the Rover that I was driving when I was rear-ended while sitting at a red light minding my own business. Given my brothers experience with his insurance company and the small amount of damage they were willing to total his RRC for. My battle would have been much MUCH harder to come to a fair conclusion over. I sincerely doubt that there is another RRC with the same modifications and as sorted as mine…in my area, that would come up on Craigslist conveniently when I would be fighting with the insurance company.
Even though I have a four-inch thick folder full of receipts it does not cover the value of things I bought used like the sliders, lift kit, snorkel, winch, etc. More importantly though is the fact that all of the time I have invested into making sure that my RRC is sorted out, dependable, and had high quality modifications done to it, are not covered. The frustrating bit is, if I had paid someone else to do all of the things I have done and had a receipt for proof, it would then be covered. I am not looking for a “ BIG payday” if my Rover were totaled. What I am looking for is to have it be less harmful and not leave me worse off. I thought the whole point of paying for insurance was to replace what was lost not get harmed all over again.
I invested all of that time and money into my Rover so it would be perfectly suited for my tastes, comforts, and uses so that it would enable me to do even more of the things that I want to do in my life. So if it gets totaled, stolen, or something worse, I would like to at least be able to replace the vehicle I lost with another of equal or nearly equal value and functionality.

I know I am not the first person to face this issue, which is why I am asking everyone’s advice. I am looking for an “Agreed value” policy that will still allow me to drive my vehicle off road because that is the whole point of our vehicles. I know that insurance and “off-road” do not really go together because there are so many different issues that can arise. However, I believe that if I roll my vehicle (hopefully that never happens) due to my own stupidity while on a trail then the damages to my vehicle are on my shoulders, but if I am at a campsite, national forest, national park, fire road, or some other place and it gets stolen, broken into, or someone crashes into me. I would like to be able to still call the insurance company.

So here is my question….With so many “Expedition/Overlanding/Off-road vehicles” on this website, what do you ladies and gentlemen have for insurance to make sure that you don’t lose your vehicle? Also, does your insurance cover other countries? I live in the United States and plan to do some exploring in Canada, Alaska, as well as many other countries, and it would be nice to be covered while I am away from my home country.


Any Advice you could offer me would be genuinely be appreciated.

Thank you very much!

Have a good day!

Jon

P.S.
I will be posting quite a few pictures either today or tomorrow, I just need to finish doing the write ups for them. I am sorry for taking so long.
 

jessejman

Adventurer
Insurance woes...

Jon,
Same thing happened to me in my built 80 series Land Cruiser (Don't worry, I also own a Series rig). Wife was hit head on. They wanted to total and give me $2200. Months of fighting with them and I got no total loss and $4500. That money funded the rest of the build and some of our trip this summer.

Since then I have gone back to my insurance company to bump up the value of my vehicles and make sure that all was in order in case it ever happens again. I pay more for my insurance but it is now valued at over $10k due to the work I've put into it. The downside here is that if someone else hits you there is no way they will pay that much out. You would have to file a claim with your own insurance company who would reimburse you and then they would sue the other persons insurance. So again, your rates go up because you had to make a claim on your own insurance. This is at least the way I understood it from all the crap I went through last year.

Our US insurance is good in Canada but not Mexico, of course. If you want international coverage you usually have to go through an international carrier. There are some posts on Expo that recommend good carriers that are mostly based in the UK and they're pricey.

Great build you have going on and glad you're back to it. -J.
 
Last edited:

Snagger

Explorer
It's not of much help to you over there, but I insure my vehicles with agreed value policies and also ensure they are covered off road. The two are not mutually exclusive, but here mnost companies will not cover off road use unless specifically requested and even then it's limited to non-competitive use, including non-competitive transit between competitive stages on an off road event, and would also exclude any other competitive use.

I had a big knock in my 109 that did a lot of damage to the rear body and rear cross member. The assessor thought the £15k value must have been a misprint with one too many 0's until he arrived and saw the vehicle, afterwhich the agreed value saved the day and the work was undertaken without them batting another eyelid. It's well worth having and usually entails nothing more than having a written valuation by an independent specialist.

Glad you're OK now, though.
 

Series1Rangie

Adventurer
I agree with, and have had agreed upon value ins. HOWEVER, there are 2 types of agreed value, one is you and the insurance company agree upon the value, and that is the starting point of negotiations. The other is if my car is totaled, this is what you will pay me. make sure yours is the latter. :) The first is usually easy, and might not even require an inspection. The other normally requires an inspection and appraisal.

Glad that with time it seems most of your travails have sorted themselves out.

Mike and Myles
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
Jon,
Same thing happened to me in my built 80 series Land Cruiser (Don't worry, I also own a Series rig). Wife was hit head on. They wanted to total and give me $2200. Months of fighting with them and I got no total loss and $4500. That money funded the rest of the build and some of our trip this summer.

Since then I have gone back to my insurance company to bump up the value of my vehicles and make sure that all was in order in case it ever happens again. I pay more for my insurance but it is now valued at over $10k due to the work I've put into it. The downside here is that if someone else hits you there is no way they will pay that much out. You would have to file a claim with your own insurance company who would reimburse you and then they would sue the other persons insurance. So again, your rates go up because you had to make a claim on your own insurance. This is at least the way I understood it from all the crap I went through last year.

Our US insurance is good in Canada but not Mexico, of course. If you want international coverage you usually have to go through an international carrier. There are some posts on Expo that recommend good carriers that are mostly based in the UK and they're pricey.

Great build you have going on and glad you're back to it. -J.

Jesse,

I am glad you and your wife were able to come out of it so well! It seems like there is a million ways to lose and only a few ways to win when dealing with insurance companies, I am thankful you shared your experience with me.
I believe they handled the injuries portion of my claim in a similar way. My insurance company paid for all of the medical costs initially and then was reimbursed by the other persons insurance company. Thank you very much for the great info, that is definitely helpful for future reference! Just out of curiosity, do you have the links to those posts on ExPo?

As for the insurance coverage outside the US, I am glad that it is likely that I will be covered in Canada, I will double check my policy to make sure it is similar to yours though.
To be honest, as of right now I am more interested in Canada, Alaska, the northern parts of the US, and the Sierra Nevada's, so Mexico isn't a large concern for me just yet. I may have to change my coverages around a bit when I do head that way though. So it is good to know that I need to review my policy before heading out.

Thank you very much for the compliment! I truly appreciate it! :)
 
Last edited:

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
It's not of much help to you over there, but I insure my vehicles with agreed value policies and also ensure they are covered off road. The two are not mutually exclusive, but here mnost companies will not cover off road use unless specifically requested and even then it's limited to non-competitive use, including non-competitive transit between competitive stages on an off road event, and would also exclude any other competitive use.

I had a big knock in my 109 that did a lot of damage to the rear body and rear cross member. The assessor thought the £15k value must have been a misprint with one too many 0's until he arrived and saw the vehicle, afterwhich the agreed value saved the day and the work was undertaken without them batting another eyelid. It's well worth having and usually entails nothing more than having a written valuation by an independent specialist.

Glad you're OK now, though.

Snagger,

Even though things may be a bit different on the states side of the pond I still appreciate your sharing your experience with me and I am glad to hear that they fixed your 109 without too much trouble. I do have a question though. Just to help me clarify and understand the particulars of what you are saying. When you say "companies will not cover off road use unless specifically requested and even then it's limited to non-competitive use, including non-competitive transit between competitive stages on an off road event, and would also exclude any other competitive use". Does mean that if you were on your way down a back country lane to the the event or to the next stage and (heaven forbid) something happened, it would be covered? Your vehicle is only not covered when your are actually doing your competitive run, right?


Thank you very much! I am glad I am ok now as well. :)
 

rrclassicbt550

Farmer Jon
I agree with, and have had agreed upon value ins. HOWEVER, there are 2 types of agreed value, one is you and the insurance company agree upon the value, and that is the starting point of negotiations. The other is if my car is totaled, this is what you will pay me. make sure yours is the latter. :) The first is usually easy, and might not even require an inspection. The other normally requires an inspection and appraisal.

Glad that with time it seems most of your travails have sorted themselves out.

Mike and Myles

Mike,

Thank you very much for the information! I am definitely looking for the latter agreed value policy. I don't mind paying a little bit more as long as I know the Rover is fully covered and there will not have to be a battle with the insurance company.


Thank you very much, I am glad to have most of them behind me as well. :)
 

Forum statistics

Threads
186,626
Messages
2,888,236
Members
226,766
Latest member
Josh00333
Top