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Thread: Shu Roo?

  1. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by JDNSW View Post
    Also used on virtually all metal ships and boats that are permanently on the water, and used extensively in industrial situations. They all have one thing in common - the metal being protected is totally immersed in water. I know from experience that while electronic rust prevention stops the outside of my boat from corrosion below the water line, it does nothing for it above the water line, nor does it stop it from rusting from the inside. So go for it if your car spends its life below water.

    John
    That's Cathodic protection for vessels in water.

    Most of the ERPS work by CAPACITIVE protection. Apparently high end Hondas are shipping with them in certain markets

    Back to the sho-roo, when I was travelling a lot to model aeroplane competitions which involved predominitely night driving I had one. This was also after nailing a unfortunate roo.

    I didn't hit any after I got it, but then you never know. I still have it too, and I haven't bothered fitting it to the fender yet. I try not to drive at night in roo prone areas.

    I remeber one of my fleet coleages giving me an article based on a study by one of the big trucking mobs that trialled them by running them on some trucks and not others. Apparently they reported no difference between those with and without.

  2. #22
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    I saw the result of hit at Eucla, about 1976. A 70s Statesman with a roo bar being towed in to the garage; unbelievable; the 'roo must've been called Mack or Kenworth.

    The driver insisted it just a big 'roo...

    Put anything on your car, if it helps...hopefully...

    There are lots of cars around here with 'roo guard thingys and none of them are bent.....

    GQ

  3. #23
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    Waste of time and money.

    Having had a Shu Roo fitted to our Patrol from new (June'01) and having de-commissioned the useless piece of crap last year (after the umpteenth roo strike) I reckon I'm qualified to cast a vote on them. Yes, we live in the country, so dodging roo's and wallabies and cattle, sheep, etc are a daily occurance, hence the attractiveness of a Shoo Roo.
    Interestingly the Defender has never had a shu roo fitted and roo strikes are about the same (still too many to count)

    Your best protection is to slow down and have a steel bull bar up front and steel side rails.
    I've pulled up in front of Swamp Wallabies, Eastern Greys and Red necked Wallabies switching it on and off and they didn't even blink.
    Two even hopped towards the vehicle.

    FWIW, and in the interests of balanced reporting, the FIL has had Shu Roo's fitted to at least three new Citroen's in the same period and swears by them, yet he's had a number of roo strikes driving the same roads and doesn't even drive at night, so go figure.


  4. #24
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    my missus is a wildlife carer and over the past 15 years i have had the displeasure of sharing my yard with a few dozen grey roos, and I can vouch for the fact that they are one of the stupidest animals on the planet as well as one of the most driven by hunger. No beeping noise is going to put them off that green pick on the road side, and also the thing sounds like a cricket chirping, most roos would have heard that before??
    The Ugly Duckling-
    03 Defender Xtreme, now reduced by 30%.


    a master of invisibleness.

  5. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jamo View Post


    Get a really good set of spotties if you are driving at night.
    Good until you get oncoming traffic, then its almost darkness as the eyes adjust to low beam.

    We travel interstate at night a lot to race, so I fitted a set of IPF 130w and when they are on not much jumps toward us, maybe they are too bright and they turn away. On low beam they jump straight towards us.

    We did hit a wombat on Thunderbolts Way, luckily he just hit the diffs and trailer axle, wifey aimed and hit him square on and there was no damage. He was huge, took both of us to drag it off the road. I was worried someone would hit the body in the dark.

    I bought some of those whistles for my road bike but haven't fitted them yet, I try to avoid riding at night.


    Jeff

  6. #26
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    There was a univeristy study done a couple of years ago. They looked at the effects on tame roos, wild roos, they studied data on hits from vehicles with and without, they looked into truck statistics, you name they looked at it. End Result from the study....

    They Dont Work.

  7. #27
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    Apparently they work for elephants though. A friend of mine hasn't had a single elephant jump out in front of him since he fitted one to his car.

    1973 Series III LWB 1983 - 2006
    1998 300 Tdi Defender Trayback 2006 - often fitted with a Trayon slide-on camper.

  8. #28
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    my 5 c..

    shoo roos dont work... fit a better bull bar..

    hiclones MIGHT make a marginal improvement on an engine built before the concept of turbulance was worked out for induction systems

    Electronic Rust protection works but needs to be used correctly 24/7 and will not help you if you have exposed edges or bimetalic contact. once you start to get rust they are useless, sort of like a condom, good while intact but essentially useless once broken.
    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
    Tdi autoManual 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.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by crump View Post
    I can vouch for the fact that they are one of the stupidest animals on the planet as well as one of the most driven by hunger.
    Nope - Deer are stupider. We have 30 or 40 running around the back paddocks and they are dumber than sheep.

  10. #30
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    Lol dunno how they go with roos, I've never seen someone drive through a mob of roos. But be damned if they dont do something. Was watching a farmer herd his sheep from one paddock to the next (across a road). Sore a leisurely driver come up and stop at the other edge of the herd. The sheep just kept dawdling...then all of a sudden they just scattered. It -looked- hilarious, and the farmer was ****ed. Soon as the car passed everything went back to normal. Quite funny, unless you were the farmer...

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