Depends on which carbies are fitted. The original twin carby setup of the rangies were great, I never had any issues until I had the motor swapped to a p76 with a 350 holley - this was great for street but rubbish offroad.
I've been looking at buy an old classic, I'd like efi but in my budget I know it's not going to happen, so my question is: how dose a carberetered rangie handle the steep incline or the rough bumps of a rocky inclines?
Thanks for your help,
Jason.
Depends on which carbies are fitted. The original twin carby setup of the rangies were great, I never had any issues until I had the motor swapped to a p76 with a 350 holley - this was great for street but rubbish offroad.
98 Harvey the tractor - 300 tdi Defender Wagon
84 Alfetta GTV
Never had any problems with mine. I usually switch to petrol for offroading for the extra power. I've been on some pretty rough stuff.
Had plenty of problems with other stuff, but not that
Probably better fuel ecomomy with EFI, and the carby's can be hard/expensive to tune.
1 of the rangies that I have been looking at has the P76 engine with a 600 holly, I don't want fuel running to the front or back of the carby and floading or stally out the engine.
Guy so in your experience this would be a bad combo?
Thanks,
Jason.
If you do buy it and want to change over to the strombergs, I have a set + manifold that you can have.
John
Series 2 LWB - Gone
Series 3 LWB - Gone
Series 1 LWB - Gone
81 RR 2 door - Gone
95 Disco v8 - The Next Victim
I know nothing about the 600 Holley. The P76 was a fantastic improvement but the holley created all sorts of dramas. Some people have apparently been able to overcome the flooding issue but I wasn't and none of the workshops that I deal with were able to either. You can lower the float level which does improve it a bit, but you still get to a point where it floods. Some advise to turn it round 180 deg but this just means that it floods going down hills rather than up. There was/is an offroad kit available but when this was fitted to mine it flooded going down hill. If I had to choose when I'd prefer it to flood and stall it'd definitely be up hill, loosing power, steering and brakes going down a hill is not fun.
I suppose it depends on what sort of 4wding you intend to do with the vehicle, if its just light tracks and beach etc, there shouldn't be any issues but if you're wanting to do steep technical tracks eg Glass House Mtns etc personally I'd steer clear of the Holleys.
Cheap EFI Rangies do appear occasionally.
98 Harvey the tractor - 300 tdi Defender Wagon
84 Alfetta GTV
Or transplant a disco engine and harness into the rangie. v8 discos can be had for as little as $500 unreg,unroadworthy.
I know of a disco thats about to get a heart transplant and since Im pulling the engine can probably arrange for you to have it complete with the relevent harness for a chip in at the cost of the replacement heart and something to encourage me to not take the existing v8 out with the high speed tools as opposed to the proper spanners.
Dave
"In a Landrover the other vehicle is your crumple zone."
For spelling call Rogets, for mechanicing call me.
Fozzy, 2.25D SIII Ex DCA Ute
TdiautoManual d1 (gave it to the Mupion)
Archaeoptersix 1990 6x6 dual cab(This things staying)
If you've benefited from one or more of my posts please remember, your taxes paid for my skill sets, I'm just trying to make sure you get your monies worth.
If you think you're in front on the deal, pay it forwards.
Get an Edelbrock dual plane manifold and a Rochester Quadrajet. Follow Rochester's instructions re modifications for off road racing. Get the book Rochester Carburetors, Doug Roe & Bill Fisher, HP Books. Look at http://www.cliffshighperformance.com...history_1.html.
URSUSMAJOR
Thanks Brian Hjelm, Debacked was just telling me thats what he is doing on his project.
Jason.
One thing on an old rangie classic IMO should never be changed is the carbs. Having owned a few carb Rangies over the years I haven't really had to do much to them or tune them to be honest (change the diaphram as they perish on one Rangie I had) to get them to be reliable.
The P76 engine is a dinasour, PIA to keep cool off-road. I remember mine always used to get nearly to the red and that was with a bigger radiaito, twin thermos and the engine was in good running condition). I'd stick with the 3.5, they're slow as **** but generally will keep going forever.
Trav
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