piratexpress1369a
Explorer
Is that the land rover on the lift
Sent from my SM-A530W using Tapatalk
Sent from my SM-A530W using Tapatalk
No, Bentley is on the lift, going to replace the belts and pulleys, and it was a good place to park it when we were away, less chance of it getting stolenIs that the land rover on the lift
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That's no insignificant amount, especially with the rising cost of fuel.I thing I can easily about 250kgs of weight without a problem, and maybe another 100kg through not carrying thing we don't actually need
Yes, we found things that we would never need, like a full gasket set and bearing set for the engine, and a spare set of injectors. If we were going on our around the world trip, then maybe I would carry them, but I have various spares all packaged up and labeled so people back home out send them out. Rebuilding the engine next to the side of the road is pretty unlikely even for meIain_U1250...A few yrs back I lead a group of 7 rigs on a 6 week trip solely on dirt. A few weeks before the trip I made everyone completely empty out their rigs to see what everyone was carrying. HOLY ******** the excess of items/weight was insane. Who the hell needs carry a full transfer box rebuild kit around? Not like they are going to rebuild it on the side of the road. Good luck with the "cleansing".
My first car had that, and I thought it was great as well. Now I have both the indicator stick option and the foot switch, and I find the foot switch a lot easier. This is the Mk1 version, but the switch is in the right position for me to tap it with my ankle easilyFor many years, at least in the 60s and 70s, high beam switches were on the (USA) driver's left side floor board, where you may find a dead pedal or foot rest. This makes so much sense to me, but I have not seen it on a car or truck in decades. Tap the switch to turn on the high beams, tap it again to dim them. Easy peasey.
Hello all - I have just come across this forum and would like to introduce myself.
I have a Unimog U1250 which started life as a Road-Railer for the New South Wales railways fixing their overhead wires and doing various track work.
I plan to turn it into an expedition vehicle for firstly travelling around Australia, then shipping it to Singapore and driving up through SE asia and China to Magadan in Russian, then across to Europe, and hopefully down through africa to South Africa before shipping it back to Australia.
The first photo show what it looked like when I got it home from the auction, the second what it will look like in a few months time and the third what it looks like now.
I'm currently working on the interior layout and would love to hear from other Mog (and other similar camper) owners about their layout, what they like, what they would change etc.