You want to ship roll on roll off. Container shipping is much more expensive and you have much more problems with customs. As a temporary import nobody will care about anything.
You want to ship roll on roll off. Container shipping is much more expensive and you have much more problems with customs. As a temporary import nobody will care about anything.
Thanks so much for the replies
Indeed, the "little" p38 that didn't was not my first choice as a title for the car... I do appreciate people thinking outside the box to try and help though!
@gavin I won't spoil it by telling anyone ok?Besides, I won't spoil anything. I hate those bastards throwing their **** everywhere
The only littering I would do is possible the range rover sweating power from a few seals here and there, perhaps
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On a more serious note: I am trying my utmost best to stay within GVM indeed. I have replaced the steel cable of my winch with dyneema rope. I have an hydraulic winch which is a lot lighter than an electric one since I do not need the heavy motor just a small hydraulic one. The rear is coming out completely (seats and all) and will be replaced with a drawer/storage system made from the lightest and thinnest material possible. Like 4wheeling, as slow as possibly as fast as needed; as light as possible, as strong(heavy) as needed. The rear seats weigh an absolute **** tonne so they should make up for quite some gear. I am considering removing the rear windows and replacing them with aluminium panels, lighter than glass. I already have a frontrunner roofrack to save weight and like I said will consider lithium if I really have to.
I know it is tempting to be overweight 24/7 once you are used to it but I really only mean to use the spare-wheel fuel tank when needed. Since it hangs over the rear axle the driving would be crap so I'd leave it empty whenever I can. In most parts of the world fuel is readily available and you won't even need the extra capacity which saves me quite a bit of weight (I'd say 100k's?)
The car would remain registered in the Netherlands so I guess when entering oz officials would inspect the vehicle anyway. The tanks will certainly not be full and neither will there be any food/drinks. I guess if I get entry into the country I am pretty much good to go. This does preclude the possibilty of a gvm upgrade I guess since I would have to be registered down under I think? Also, I would need to re-import the vehicle to get the GVM upgrade to be accepted down here, if they actually accept it at all! Besides, as I understand it, most GVM upgrades alter the suspension in some way and the P38 has airbags so... does a GVM upgrade even exist for these beauties? (or has it ever existed?)
Regarding the emissions test. I barely make that over here, with some tweaking so I am not sure what the rules down under are but I guess, being a foreign plated car, I would be fine?
All in all I think it is safe to say that I would run "some" risk departing from a roadhouse or fuel station on trips like the canning and so on. On every other occasion I would not be carrying the 100k's of extra fuel. I just need to make sure my setup fits within the GVM with that extra tank empty.
The alternative is to ditch this pretty hefty investment and go for something with a higher load carrying capacity. A defender can go up to 1000kg I believe but that is "only" 300k's more than the range rover anyway. Could just be enough though. I would like to avoid this since the defender, though THE 4x4 imho, drives less comfortably and I would have to start all over again fitting that out and not much from the P38 would carry over. Well, the engine would so that's a nice plus but that's about...
Finally, the air suspension would "mask" the amount of weight I carry since the cars stance would look perfectly normal![]()
Cheers,
-P
The reality is a stock looking vehicle has almost nil chance of being pulled over but a modified vehicle is.
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
If your vehicle ends up looking like a monster truck by the time you've done all your mods, then expect to get hassled by the cops at some stage. Depending on their mood and attention to detail, they might check your GVM.
The other thing you need to consider is insurance! if you have an accident and are found to be over your GVM, they may refuse cover. Insurance companies will go out of their way to get out of paying a claim.
Also, carrying a load like that can make it unstable and hard to handle. While you might think its ok and you are used to it, it can not only affect your cornering, but your braking distance as well. Again, if you're over GVM, you are on the wrong side of the law.
LAND ROVER;HELPING PUT OIL BACK IN THE GROUND FOR 70 YEARSCARS DON'T GET ANY "GREENER" THAT.
There is a terrific YouTube series about an Aussie and his Frenchie wife touring the world in their defender. I’m not sure if I can post it here as it might get blocked, but you can search for GrizzlynBear Overland.
You can select their vids from oldest to newest and of course subscribe. I get nothing out of this btw, just helping you out.
Leigh is a mine of information and their YouTube videos are inspirational.
They were recently in Japan.
Leigh just posted a video about crossing borders and what to look out for.
Cheers
No issues posting YouTube link.
They are still in Japan.....for awhile![]()
Don't be scared be prepared!!! Are borders really that bad??? Overland border crossings... - YouTube
Mate I think you really need to understand the difference between Overlanding and Off Roading, there is a HUGE difference and judging by the description of what you are doing to your P38 I think you are setting up as an off roader when you should be setting it up as an Overlanding Vehicle.
Best thing I could recommend is to follow a few You Tubers who are already Overlanding and all your questions will be answered very quickly, my favourites and I support are GrizzlynBear Overland. and The Road Chose Me.
Also read the book "Overlanders Handbook" By Chris Scott.
A P38 will definitely do the job but if you overload it you are asking for a lot of head aches and an enormous fuel bill and I wouldn't be taking up the Canning Stock Route.
Good Luck I hope you succeed.
1995 Defender 130 Mulgo Conversion.
2015 Disco HSE (Black Pack).
2010 L322 Rangie Autobiography 5L Supercharged.
If I was doing that sort of touring, certainly in Australia, I would ditch the winch. If you are going somewhere that bad that you would need a winch you are better off going with a group or someone else and take a recovery strap. Get a set of Maxxtracks or equivalent for soft sand and a long handled shovel. Save the weight of the winch for something else.
my 2c
Warren
Currently Landroverless - Still interested
Formerly: 2003 D2a Update TD5 Auto. Platinum edition. ARB Bar, 36" LED light bar, cargo barrier, dual batteries.
Yes, you can save quite some weight by ditching the winch. If you're overlanding, not off roading up cliffs, and you avoid getting bogged, you probably won't need a winch, but do have tow hooks and a snatch.
Another way to save weight is to have aluminium rather than steel drawers. Mine saved 15kg.
Distances in Australia are much longer than Europe, which is why most people go diesel rather than petrol. Petrol is also flammable, which affects how it can be carried. Fuel is also much more expensive in remote areas.
Extra weight puts extra stresses on your whole vehicle and can cause breakages over long distances. Lighter is better.
You don't need every flash off-road accessory. You do need a vehicle that is reliable. Focus on very thorough servicing, particularly fluids, filters and belts. Suspension, tyres, lights and cooling system are priorities, along with engine and transmission. Alternator should be in great shape.
Overlanders think like long distance runners.
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