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drakes Member Since: 26 Jan 2009 Location: Consett Posts: 371 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Very similar to my first one as is my name to yours 2010 3.6TDV8 Stornoway Grey/ Black interior - gone
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Another Drake - sorry about that, didn't mean to steal your name! |
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drakes Member Since: 26 Jan 2009 Location: Consett Posts: 371 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
It's a road I used to live in at the time I joined the forum so nothing to do with my name at all.
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Does everyone giggle like a small boy when they take a Range Rover off the road for the first time? It's certainly a memorable moment for a new owner.
Mine came after a week of ownership last Summer when visiting a friend who lives in an old farmhouse in a hamlet a few miles away. The usual journey involves a maze of ever-narrowing and increasingly lumpy lanes but on the way I suddenly remembered what I was driving - I could finally take the shortcut that he always uses in his old Defender. A couple of minutes later I was through a sunken field gate and fish-tailing with my foot down like a hooligan following old tyre tracks over steep, wet, rough slopes of long grass. I couldn't stop laughing, it was a revelation to feel the way the car's character changed seamlessly from cruiser to bruiser. It then made mincemeat of the rutted, slick track that skirts a wood and twists to and fro next to a stream, emerging after a steep downhill section strewn with rocks and roots into my friend's over-grown paddock and then to his back door where I leaned on the horn to give him a surprise. It was the most fun I'd had behind the wheel for ages, and that was without getting anywhere near the car's limits. Here's a picture taken yesterday of my co-pilot while we were out and about - he appreciates being driven into random muddy bits of country and being released to chase wildlife without any of those boring roads or leads to hold him up.
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gettingold Member Since: 03 Apr 2018 Location: Wiltshire Posts: 285 ![]() ![]() |
What a great story and car |
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Thanks for that. You live in a lovely area up there over the border - the plains are a great place to be out and about. I find myself in the South of Wiltshire a lot, one of my top walking spots is the country park and surrounding land at Stourhead, there are some great forester's tracks through large areas of woodland near there which are fun to explore by RR as well as on foot. |
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DrRob Member Since: 16 Apr 2015 Location: Petersfield, Hampshire Posts: 4327 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Are the Stourhead tracks legal byways? Gone to a good home: 2011 4.4 TDV8 Vogue SE Buckingham Blue with Ivory and clear glass = "Rory"
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
I wouldn't dream of driving into National Trust land, privately-owned land without permission, along footpaths or anywhere there were homes, walkers, cyclists, fragile wildlife or crops. Forestry commission land is also prohibited of course but the many miles of logging tracks are carved out by far heavier machinery than Range Rovers and there are areas in which you don't see a soul all day... say no more. All I know is that it's best to stay on the road at all times if you want to ensure no rules, laws or by-laws might be broken... |
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
It seems pretty common to lose a headlight lens on a Mk 3 to road debris judging by the various threads on the subject. Something hit one of mine hard last month, piercing the glass and allowing water in. I had to wait to replace it until I could find a decent used item... I figured that if I bought a nice shiny new one, I'd have to change the other side to get them to match. That would cost maybe £200 and involve chucking away a perfectly good part so I paid £40 for an old one and finally got it fitted last weekend in between rain storms.
I appreciated the simplicity of removing the light units, grille and lens, it was no harder than on my Triumph Herald which is made of Meccano. The only difficulty was caused by my own impatience: I refitted the unit only to find it misting up again after ten minutes because I hadn't allowed it to dry out thoroughly, so I had to do the job twice (leaving the unit in the warm overnight the second time). Still, it's always nice to make a little repair for hardly any money, especially if you're a bit of duffer. |
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fenlander Member Since: 14 Jan 2020 Location: Norfolk Posts: 124 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
You have got me wondering (great write-ups BTW!) about the headlight damage issue...
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Drake Member Since: 04 Jan 2020 Location: Somerset Posts: 18 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Thanks for that - it's interesting idea...
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fenlander Member Since: 14 Jan 2020 Location: Norfolk Posts: 124 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Very similar quarry story hereabouts in Norfolk!
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PaulTyrer Member Since: 22 Jul 2013 Location: Devizes, Wiltshire Posts: 1260 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Wouldn't the headlamp wipers rip any covers off? |
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fenlander Member Since: 14 Jan 2020 Location: Norfolk Posts: 124 ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Good point re headlamp wipers, though maybe as the film is best applied with a squeegee then it shouldn't tear?
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