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maddia
11th June 2013, 09:26 PM
After finding there were very limited options for these, I decided on the Mantec sump and fuel tank guards for my 2012 FL2. Checked on local sourcing and was quoted approx $1500 and 6 - 8 weeks.

Plan B. Contacted Mantec in UK, got a quote with airfreight which came to around $890. I placed the order at 7pm last Tueday by phone. Bash plates arrived 10am this morning, delayed by the weekend and the Monday public holiday. Really good effort, so good in fact that I have planned to have the first 12000km service done before fitting them, so it will be a couple of weeks before I do that.

Plates seem well constructed and come with fitting hardware and instructions. Will post pics when I do the job.

Michael78
12th June 2013, 05:36 AM
Thank you for the post. I was about to ask about these

RIN03
14th June 2013, 06:55 AM
anyone looking for bash plates might find this interesting. they seem to me a better design I have ordered mine and I will post photos of it fitted

Freelander 2 Fuel Tank Plate (http://greenovalexperience.com/fl2_tank_plate.html)

maddia
19th June 2013, 07:14 PM
Hi Jimb090. I looked at these. My concern, as an absolute 4WD novice, was that if I had to reverse out of a situation that I had got into, the straight plates at the rear of the Green Oval version could act like a scoop or even get lodged under rocks. The Mantec one has the beveled finish on the front and back.

That was the basis for my choice, I could be wrong though.

Vesko
23rd June 2013, 06:15 AM
Hey maddia, thank you for posting, this is exactly what I was looking for.

maddia
23rd June 2013, 04:52 PM
I am booking the car in for 12000km service next week. I will post pics of the fitting after that.

maddia
10th July 2013, 05:09 PM
Car serviced today. Fitted the front bash plate, very straight forward, remove 4 sump guard bolts and the front plastic trim, position new alloy plate and secure with 4 new bolts. Would be a lot easier with two people, but achievable by one.

With take pic tomorrow.

Fuel tank guard will need two people, so I might get it done next week.

Blue Td4
13th July 2013, 12:17 PM
Hi Jimb090, how did you go with the fuel tank plate? Have you installed it? Are you happy with it? Any photos?

RIN03
13th July 2013, 04:30 PM
Should be here on Monday or Tuesday I will post photos

maddia
16th July 2013, 11:03 AM
Fitted the rear bashplate this morning. Took about an hour working by myself. Nothing too difficult.

Rear left bracket is held by a single bolt, although instructions for drilling and using a second is provided. If like me, you don't feel comfortable drilling into the support so use the single fitting, you have the problem of the handbrake cable fitting moving as you tighten the bolt up.

Definately need to use a jack to ensure the back fittings are snug up against the body.

Next to take it for a run, then come back and retighten all the bolts, to be sure.

Hats off to Mantec who supplied a product that is designed to fit, no at home modifications required.

maddia
16th July 2013, 01:53 PM
forgot the pic of the front bash plate.

maddia
22nd July 2013, 07:11 AM
The other thing I forgot to mention was the cost, in British pounds.

Tank Guard 273.60
Sump Guard 187.20
Air Freight 97.10

Paid, sent and arrived, 7 days.

:D

dpf
15th September 2013, 07:59 PM
How is the clearance with the fuel tank guard? Does it take much off?

dpf
23rd September 2013, 07:55 AM
I installed the Sump Guard and Fuel Guard last week. Very impressed with how easy it was to install and the quality of the parts.

My only criticism is the fuel guard and the clearance. While it only drops the overall clearance slightly, instead of only having one low point, the entire guard is the same height, so now there is a large surface area at the new 'low point'. I can see this being fine for out in the bush - especially if there are rocks that could easily damage the fuel tank, however 99% of the offroading I do is on the beach, and for that I want the highest clearance I can get. With the guard in place it looked like it would just belly out, especially with the tyres let down. So I'm keeping the sump guard but the fuel guard is now for sale.

RIN03
23rd September 2013, 05:33 PM
what price tag will you be putting on the fuel tank. I am in the same boat as you with mainly beach driving but I am interested in seeing how it looks

dpf
23rd September 2013, 06:06 PM
I'll pm you.

maddia
25th September 2013, 05:27 AM
DPF, sorry for not replying, been away and not near a computer.

I have not tried the performance on sand with the plates attached yet, maybe this weekend if things work out.

For me, the insurance that the fuel tank is protected is worth it, especially after my first off road run that included a few rocky creek crossings, one of which resulted in a bracket in front of the fuel tank being bent and some scratches on the fuel tank. Lucky that day, but with more off road planned, I did not want to risk it again.

dpf
26th November 2013, 09:53 AM
I've sold the Freelander 2 for a bigger 4x4, so the bash plates that did less than 200km are for sale! Both the Mantec front guard and the fuel tank guard. $500 for both if anyone is interested.

Alan7140
26th November 2013, 12:33 PM
Hi Jimb090. I looked at these. My concern, as an absolute 4WD novice, was that if I had to reverse out of a situation that I had got into, the straight plates at the rear of the Green Oval version could act like a scoop or even get lodged under rocks. The Mantec one has the beveled finish on the front and back.

That was the basis for my choice, I could be wrong though.

For anyone else: I have the Green Oval one and the rear flats sit hard up against the tank cushioned by a foam rubber strip- there's no way they could act as a scoop. While there's no rear support, the plate would protect the tank from being punctured by a rock, and logically the mount points are at the front as this is where contact would most likely occur before anything else such as backing out happens.

The vulnerable points of the plate are the two outrigger front mounting brackets, although they would simply fold up if hit hard enough - the plate itself cant move as the two inboard mounting holes are straight into existing threaded holes that form part of the stock tank mount and "guard" assembly.

The whole plate is very light and creates minimal decrease in ground clearance, basically just the thickness of the aluminium of the plate itself. The strongest part is the front, and you'd certainly know if you hit something immovable with it. The tank would likely survive intact, though, which is the aim after all.

I don't know if all of this is by design or not, but that's the way it works on my vehicle, and while those outside mounting brackets do hang down and look awfully flimsy, I have yet to have them actually connect with anything in two years. Maybe later designs have improved on them, though (unless of course they are designed to "give" rather than "hit", which in itself is a sound enough approach in protecting the vehicle rather than transferring the impact into it).

Of course my obvious viewpoint is that if bouncing off rocks is to be a regular pastime, perhaps the Freelander 2 is not the vehicle that one should be driving - a shorty Land Cruiser or Defender 90 might be a better choice.

cdn_downunder
12th January 2014, 08:39 AM
I've sold the Freelander 2 for a bigger 4x4, so the bash plates that did less than 200km are for sale! Both the Mantec front guard and the fuel tank guard. $500 for both if anyone is interested.
Are you bash plates still available?

dpf
20th January 2014, 07:11 AM
Are you bash plates still available?

They are, I'll PM you.