
Originally Posted by
johntins
Quite right, although I'm not sure the Station Wagon came here. Or, for that matter, the Wagoneer on any regular basis. The FJ45 came here for sure. It was a revelation, although the mob still bought LRs. Quite a lot of people back then held a distrust for the Japanese. Funny that it didn't stop sales of VWs at the time..
I believe that the Wagoneer had the first electric tailgate window I had ever seen, and I spent much time with Rolls Royce cars in those days ( there's a story there ), and few had electric windows anywhere.
Interestingly, I am familiar with one Jeep stationwagon that was in Australia in the sixties. Fitted with special equipment, it was left hand drive - which hints at how many were around!
I had an FJ45V Stationwagon as my company car in 1965-6 in the Simpson Desert. In my view it was not a patch on the other FJ45s and FJ40s we had (all brand new). It was the roughest riding vehicle I have ever travelled in, and is the only vehicle I have ever had break completely through all leaves on a spring, on a single bump. The bodywork fell to pieces. Even from brand new, the rear seat folded whenever you hit a bump. The excessive overhang at the back meant that load distribution was very poor, and with no tiedowns, your load bounced on the floor every bump, rapidly reducing it to look like a ploughed field. The huge tailgate provided an inviting platform to sit or stand on, but was not strong enough for the typical Australian to do so - bent hinge mounts then meant difficulty closing the tailgate and soon resulted in it falling off.
Steering, as on other Landcruisers at the time used a very badly engineered steering relay that rapidly produced excessive free play, helped by attaching the drag link to the track rod, so that the first bit of movement on the steering simply rotated the track rod to the limit of the tie rod ends. The three speed gearbox and high geared low range compared to Landrovers and Patrols were significant disadvantages. The carburettor gave a lot of problems, and failure of the voltage regulator, giving overcharging was common.
On the other hand, the higher power was a definite advantage compared to Landrovers. And, except for the wandering steering, it drove very well on the road - I ran it in driving from Brisbane to Alice Springs (from just west of Camooweal without a windscreen - like almost every vehicle at the time it was toughened glass, and no replacement available before Alice).
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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