
Originally Posted by
pommie
Here here. On a recent trip through Tanzania (ok so it's not Asia) - we saw dozens of roadside mechanics - each one of them with a Land Rover series or Defender of some kind in various stage of deconstruction/reconstruction. No diagnostic computers all all - but plenty of basic tools (a lot of hammers!), some basic "shop" machinery and some very strong basic 3rd world practical know how. Body work was repaired by hand, mechanics electrics too. This is also why Defenders and Troopies are also the basic Safari vehicles - they are simple to fix.
Try bashing the insides of a Prado by hand - see how far you get.
When i was in Kenya/ Tanzania i was amazed at the amount of shells on the side of the road that had been picked clean like a vulture on a buffalo carcass, and the mechanics are amazingly resourceful, they wer making suspension bushes out of old tyres ! In the Transkei in Sth Africa i saw numerous holden hq and valiant wrecks in paddocks picked clean with only a set of tyre marks on the bitumen showing where it came from.
We went to Ngoro goro crater in Tanzania in a V8 110 defender and the driver hammered it no matter what the road conditions, i felt sorry for the other guys in the FJ landlooser and series 3 wagon on leaf springs over those rough roads.
MY08 TDV6 SE D3- permagrin ooh yeah
2004 Jayco Freedom tin tent
1998 Triumph Daytona T595
1974 VW Kombi bus
1958 Holden FC special sedan
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