remove the rear propshaft, engage 4wd and you're back on the road. it will be more difficult to drive, i recommend you make a train convoy with the damaged landie at the rear until you find a new bearing ;-).
ps what radio material did you use? i saw the big antenna's. ;-)
The last comment is a bit un fair as they are older models with petrol motors requiring large amounts of petrol to be carried.
All the vehicles were overloaded and were running the worst tyres for running over sand giving little floatation and making transmissions and motors work harder cutting though the sand and not floating over it.
This comment has received too many negative votesshow
Judging by part I and part II of this video...I guess Land Rovers are not as tough as people say they are. Given the fact these vehicles are practically made for these terrains.
also judging that these rovers couldn't be much newer than 1970, that is pretty unfair. Show me a 4 cylinder petrol engined 4wheel drive that could do this and get you home.
@guitardavid79 The old series Landies are tough indeed, especially the 2.25 Litre diesels, and if they have rear diff lock. They are hard to kill. I had one 14 years, and my dad had the very same one for 20 years before I got hold of it. I have a defender 130 now, but stil a series landrover still possess some good traits, better than a defender, like not being shy of getting thrashed about in the bush, in the field or open desert, and still having the torque and capacity to get you home.
Although the diff is knackered you could always remove the rear prop and continue in front wheel drive only.
nedster01 7 months ago
that guy is a total idiot!!!!!!
how can you pretend to undertake a trip to Africa and not even check your oil levels!
dum guy with money
D901619 1 year ago
So you headed out w/o checking the gear oil level in the diffs?
rickartj 1 year ago
remove the rear propshaft, engage 4wd and you're back on the road. it will be more difficult to drive, i recommend you make a train convoy with the damaged landie at the rear until you find a new bearing ;-).
ps what radio material did you use? i saw the big antenna's. ;-)
savagedefender 2 years ago
The last comment is a bit un fair as they are older models with petrol motors requiring large amounts of petrol to be carried.
All the vehicles were overloaded and were running the worst tyres for running over sand giving little floatation and making transmissions and motors work harder cutting though the sand and not floating over it.
RONAEMVCS 2 years ago 3
I guess "guitardavid79" would have gone for the BMW in part 1. ROTFLMAO!
BuzzAwuzZ 2 years ago 4
@RONAEMVCS
Not to mention the load. I mean, damn, those are some seriously overloaded SWB Landies.
blibbax 10 months ago
This comment has received too many negative votes show
Judging by part I and part II of this video...I guess Land Rovers are not as tough as people say they are. Given the fact these vehicles are practically made for these terrains.
guitardavid79 2 years ago
also judging that these rovers couldn't be much newer than 1970, that is pretty unfair. Show me a 4 cylinder petrol engined 4wheel drive that could do this and get you home.
iheart4wheeldrive 2 years ago
The Indomitable Subaru Forester!...It might not carry as much gear ,but checkout Subaroute. I was impressed. You might be too.
manflintt 2 years ago
@guitardavid79 The old series Landies are tough indeed, especially the 2.25 Litre diesels, and if they have rear diff lock. They are hard to kill. I had one 14 years, and my dad had the very same one for 20 years before I got hold of it. I have a defender 130 now, but stil a series landrover still possess some good traits, better than a defender, like not being shy of getting thrashed about in the bush, in the field or open desert, and still having the torque and capacity to get you home.
yehudiadelphos 1 year ago