This 120 pic was taken at Coolatai (NSW) a couple of months ago. The local owner bought it new (an did not want to part with it either).
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This 120 pic was taken at Coolatai (NSW) a couple of months ago. The local owner bought it new (an did not want to part with it either).
That one is a bit cleaner than mine.
And worth a lot more too.:D
Matt
But yours is more complete than mine Matt :)
Attachment 79933
Steve
SteveG . As you can see it even came with the kitchen sink. :D
Is yours a project you are in the process of rebuilding ?
Matt
Ah yeah, well - sort of.....
Actually had it in the shed ready to make a start, then my daughter bought home TheTurdis110.
Been busy with that since then so the 120 has been delayed a bit.
Steve
I bet your proud as punch having your Daughter bring home an Isuzu 110 :D
As for the EDIC gizmo the best fix is to ditch it and fit a manual push pull cable that you twist to lock in the out position
This is what is fitted to my 135 Isuzu crew cab and is fine most stage 1 Isuzu rovers had a similar set up fitted to the steering column that was locked out with the ignition switch
Yes, pretty proud :) Just have to watch I don't end up missing most of my spares stash though...
Despite the general loathing for them, I've had zero issues with the EDIC on my county (one of the Mazda T3500 truck ones). Must be going on 4 years now since it was fitted. Only time I've had to disconnect it was due to an ignition switch issue on our Simpson trip last year. Agreed, a cable stop would have saved me 15mins and a bit of clutch stress when that happened.
For anyone else that may need to drive it occasionally, with the EDIC it also becomes a turn the key and go operation.
Pro's and con's for everything as always, but I think a lot of people ditch the EDIC due to LR's stupid "store it in a bag of water until it drowns" design , and then not taking the time to realise that they are VERY simple and generally easily fixed before throwing them out.
Steve