Buying Guide
Buying Guide
Buying Guide
COM
Table of Contents
5 Engine History 17
Glossary 26
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Are you looking to buy your first Land Rover? Confused by modular construction of Land Rovers, it can often be easier
all the different models? Bewildered by conflicting advice to modify an existing vehicle to suit your requirements than
from friends, colleagues and ‘experts’? Then read on - I am to try and find one which already meets them. That is why,
here to help you choose the vehicle that is right for you. before I even think about showing you any vehicles for sale,
I like to understand what you will be asking your Land
Rover to do. Towing a horsebox? Camping holidays?
The first thing to understand is that there are an almost Offroad adventures? Carrying two people, or twelve?
infinite number of variations on the basic Land Rover Long distances, or just local trips? The more information
design. Since 1958 there have been three basic chassis you can give me, the better.
lengths, about half a dozen different engines and dozens
There are many myths surrounding Land Rovers, so let’s
of permutations of seating, loadspace and window
demolish a few of them at this stage.
arrangement to choose from. Thanks to the bolt-together
It’s a Land Rover all right. But is it the right one for you?
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Myth: Land Rovers are made from simply, I will not sell a vehicle that has a rotten chassis or
bulkhead (unless it is for spares or restoration). But the
aluminium, so they don’t rust. best thing you can do to protect your new purchase is to
buy a pressure washer (a cheap one will do) and make sure
you regularly power wash the chassis, especially the hollow
Truth: Most of the outer body panels on a Land Rover sections where mud and road salt can accumulate. A clean
are indeed aluminium. But the vehicle is built on an old- chassis will rust only slowly: a mud and salt-encrusted one
fashioned ladder frame chassis. This is what gives a Land will disappear much faster.
Rover its strength: it is made from mild steel sections
welded together, it is given a bare minimum of corrosion
protection at the factory, and it rusts very readily indeed. Myth: Land Rovers are so tough,
Any vehicle more than ten years old may be suffering from
chassis corrosion: the condition of the visible body panels they go on forever.
provides no guide to the state of the chassis, and chassis
replacement is a very expensive job.
Truth: Land Rovers are indeed tough and strongly built, but
(However, it is worth mentioning that most Japanese 4x4s they are not indestructible, and they do not respond well
are far more rot-prone than Land Rovers.) to neglect. A Land Rover is more complex mechanically
The other crucial structural component is the bulkhead - than the average family car, and it needs more frequent and
the structure to which the windscreen, dashboard, steering extensive servicing. Neglected Land Rovers can hide some
column, doors, bonnet and front wings are bolted. This, like quite serious mechanical faults, appearing to drive perfectly
the chassis, is a safety-critical item, and guess what? It’s well right up to the moment where they go bang. In addition,
made from mild steel, and it rusts. Replacing a bulkhead is there are a number of well-documented weaknesses, which
almost as involved and expensive as chassis replacement. vary from model to model, and which can be very expensive
to put right.
I get a lot of enquiries from people who have never before General points first. This kind of money will not stretch to
owned a Land Rover, and who fancy one of the older vehicles a post 1990 Defender TDi, at least not one that any sensible
as an introduction to Land Rover ownership. Perhaps they buyer would touch with a bargepole. So the vehicles you are
have a limited budget, only need the vehicle for occasional looking at will be OLD. At least fifteen years old, possibly
use, don’t want to tie up a huge sum of money in a vehicle forty or even older. Land Rovers are mechanically complex
that only gets used to take the dogs to the beach, like the and incorporate some very old fashioned technology. This
idea of saving £190 a year in road tax, or maybe they just like means that however clean, well-maintained and low mileage
the look of the older vehicles. your vehicle, it WILL break down at some point, and it
WILL require money spending on it, on a regular basis, to
An older Land Rover, whether an early coil-sprung 90 or keep it in good mechanical condition. If that is unacceptable
110, or one of the classic leaf sprung ‘Series’ models, can to you, go and buy a new Nissan X-Trail.
be a faithful and durable friend, but you really need to go
into the purchase with your eyes wide open and use some A Land Rover is designed as a fairly uncompromising off-
common sense. Only a couple of weeks ago I was offered road workhorse for farmers, the military and construction
a vehicle very cheaply by someone who had fancied ‘an old workers. By passenger car, or even modern 4X4 standards,
Land Rover’ and had gone out and bought the first one he it will be slow, noisy, ill-handling, with an uncomfortable
looked at. It was, in every way, a bad purchase. It was a long- driving position, minimal creature comforts and heavy
wheelbase model, so he could barely get it into his tightly controls. This applies much more to the older vehicles, but
curved driveway. It was a 2.25 3-bearing diesel, and he had even a Ninety can be a bit of a culture shock if you are used
bought it with a view to towing his boat down to the South to driving a 3-series BMW to work every day.
Coast once a month, a 400 mile round trip for which a slow,
noisy, underpowered vehicle was desperately ill-suited. The
chassis was a patchwork quilt of plates welded on top of This rugged, uncompromising, utilitarian nature is part of
other plates, and the bulkhead wasn’t much better. It had the Land Rover’s enduring appeal, but it is not to all tastes.
been through ten owners, none of whom had ever spent any Make sure you understand what an older Land Rover is all
money on it, and mechanically it was about as bad as they about before you buy one. It isn’t a cool-looking alternative
get. Every week it broke down, he took it into the garage to a Suzuki Jeep or Toyota RAV-4. It’s more like a tractor
and was presented with a large bill. Now he just wanted to that you can use to take the kids to school in.
get rid of the thing, and swore never to buy another Land
Rover again.
Safety equipment - you get seatbelts, and a big heavy ladder
frame chassis that will give you plenty of protection in front
What is really sad is that, for the money he ploughed into or rear impacts, but absolutely none in side collisions or
this rolling wreck, if he had done some basic research, taken rollovers. That’s all. No airbags, anti-lock brakes, electronic
good advice and really thought about his requirements, he stability aids, traction control or any of the other stuff that
could have had a nice, well-maintained older vehicle which keeps drivers of modern cars out of trouble. If you drive an
would have lasted him many, many years. (I didn’t buy his older Land Rover like a modern car, two things will happen:
vehicle by the way, but someone on eBay did...) you will crash, and it will hurt a lot.
So what do you need to think about, and beware of, when Now let’s look at some of the issues specific to particular
considering spending £2,000 - £3,000 (the most common models.
price range I am asked to supply) on an older Land Rover?
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Series II (1958-61), when changing up or down. All this gives every journey a
feeling of adventure, but if you just want an unchallenging,
Series IIA (1961-71): straightforward drive, one of these vehicles is not for you.
Firstly, they are not really up to modern traffic conditions Electrics - the vehicles have dynamo charging systems, long
without some important improvements. The main ones since obsolete. These do not provide enough power to keep
are: the battery charged when using all the electrics. Headlamps,
wipers and heater - you can have any two out of three, but
not all three, unless you want to end up with a flat battery.
Brakes - these vehicles did not have power assisted brakes, The problem is worst at low speeds - so if you want to use
so the brakes are very, very heavy indeed. Also they had the vehicle for winter commuting in heavy traffic, you need
single circuit brakes - so if a leak develops anywhere in the to do something about it. And the lights are inherently
system, you only have the handbrake to stop you. unreliable. Just remember the motto of the classic British
vehicle owner: “Lucas Electrics - Home Before Dark!”
Series IIA in original unrestored condition. A forty year old vehicle still doing the job it was built to do. Lovely.
But don’t forget the good points. These vehicles are simple,
sturdy and easy to work on. Most parts are still available, Series III, 1971-84:
and very cheaply at that. You can insure them on a classic If these vehicles look similar to the Series IIA, that’s because
car policy, there’s no road tax to pay, and of course you have they are. They got a new dashboard with instruments and
a genuine icon of British design, instantly recognisable the switchgear in front of the driver, synchromesh on all gears,
world over. alternator charging and slightly better interior trim, but in
essence they are still the same 1958-vintage design, with
most of the same usability and comfort issues. As production
These are the vehicles that made Land Rover’s reputation, went on through the strike-bound Seventies, quality became
and you will feel very proud to own a vehicle which is maybe very erratic, with chassis corrosion in particular becoming a
40+ years old, still doing the job for which it was designed. major issue towards the end of the production run. But the
They are real fun to drive, a properly involving driving design was steadily refined and improved through its life,
experience, and they look great. Just don’t expect them to be and the following items are well worth looking out for:
modern, because they aren’t.
This Series III from 1981 has had a much harder life than the IIA pictured above. I sold this one for rebuilding.
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Typical example of a hard-working Ninety - actually my old workhorse, now gone to a new home.
Reasons Not To Buy A Ninety IIIs, but it all went downhill from there. There are major
issues, particularly on late Eighties vehicles, with chassis
Or One Ten: rot and especially with bulkheads rotting away just below
the windscreen and around the top door hinge. Doors
Their popularity. corrode internally and fall apart, and cost about four times
Precisely because they are so much more usable in modern as much to replace as the two-piece Series doors. Wiper
conditions than the Series vehicles, demand even for older motors lose their self-parking function. Power steering has
vehicles remains high. That means that the same money unreliability built in as standard. Turbodiesels (pre TDi)
that will buy a clean, well-loved Series II or III will only blow up. Gearboxes break expensively, losing all drive to
stretch to a fairly shabby, hard-worked Ninety. You don’t get the wheels, due to a design fault which Land Rover took 14
something for nothing. years to fix.
Their complexity.
The coil spring suspension has lots of bushes which wear Their ubiquity.
and can be expensive and time-consuming to replace. The These vehicles are absolutely everywhere. If you want
permanent four wheel drive system is more complex than something distinctive which stands out from the crowd, a
the selectable system on the Series vehicles and expensive Ninety or One Ten is not the way to go. You can paint
to fix if it goes wrong. Electrical systems are more complex, it bright yellow, stick aluminium chequerplate all over
and faults therefore harder to trace. Wind-up windows the outside, fit a bullbar, huge wheels, half a dozen
and push-button door handles provide an unending source spotlights and jack up the suspension, and the next day
of irritating problems which just don’t exist on a Series you’ll meet another one coming the other way, to which
vehicle. its owner has done exactly the same as you have to yours.
But if you plan to do a lot of miles, want a Land Rover to use
as your only vehicle, need power steering, suffer from back
Their (lack of) quality. problems or spend all your life on the motorway, a Ninety or
Early One Tens (sliding side windows) seem to have One Ten is probably your best choice. However, you need to
been better built and painted than the last of the Series be very careful buying one of these vehicles. With a Series
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Land Rover used a number of different engines over the differences. 51 bhp wasn’t really good enough even in the
years, although all belonged to one of three ‘families’: late Fifties, and I would be surprised if more than a tiny
handful of these engines remain in use.
cylinder block and some other components. A big improve- diesel engines. These engines lasted beyond the end of Se-
ment over the earlier diesel: power output now a half decent ries III production and into the first couple of years of the
62 bhp. But the three bearing crank was a major weak spot: new Ninety and One Ten ranges. Well worth paying extra
despite being made of better materials than the petrol one, for, if you are looking to replace a worn or broken 3 bearing
it flexed at high revs and tended to break under load with engine in a Series vehicle.
expensive consequences. Fuel injection pump was driven
off the camshaft by a skew gear which wore badly, giving
unstable pump timing and lots of light grey smoke on older
engines. One of these engines, if assembled properly, is still 3528cc V8 Petrol:
just about up to modern use: but keep below 45 mph (55
The ex-Buick all alloy V8 engine appeared in the Range
on overdrive-equipped vehicles) to be sure you don’t break
Rover right from the start of production in 1970, but did
anything.
not make its way into the company’s utility vehicles until
1979. The Series III 109 V8 (or ‘Stage One V8’) was in-
tended to replace the 2.6 litre six cylinder vehicles: Land
2625cc Petrol, inlet-over-exhaust: Rover’s engineers obviously thought the new vehicle would
be too fast for its brakes and suspension, so they detuned
Borrowed from the Rover saloon range, in response to de- the engine to 91 bhp by fitting restrictors in the carbs. Re-
mands from mid-Sixties Land Rover users for more power moving these takes the engine up to Range Rover spec (138
and torque. The big, heavy old straight six was heavily de- bhp or thereabouts). The One Ten (from 1983) had the 138
tuned for commercial use. Acquired a reputation for over- bhp V8 as an option from the start, and the same engine
heating and cracking cylinder heads, mainly due to operator later appeared in the Ninety. The V8 engines were gradually
neglect. (Nothing much wrong with the engine, as long as phased out after the TDi turbodiesel appeared, with only a
you keep fluids topped up and don’t let it go out of tune.) handful being fitted to Defenders as a special order option
Also it was thirsty and barely more powerful than the four after 1990.
cylinder petrol engine, although it sounds lovely and devel-
ops usefully more torque. Parts supply these days is patchy
(although the engine remained available until 1980). The The V8, in all its applications, is a strong and reliable en-
Weslake-head 3 litre engine from a Rover P5 is near enough gine, but not indestructible: camshafts wear out at around
a direct swap and used to be very popular, so check those 90-100 thousand miles, head gaskets and camchains usu-
serial numbers. ally go around the same time. These engines can hide seri-
ous problems very well, so be suspicious of one which has
a slight misfire or is a bit down on power - it is probably
Mark Rumsey (Series II Club technical guru) adds: “(The overdue for a rebuild.
straight six) feels barely more powerful than a 2.25 when
driven in the same way, but in fact is quite a lot more pow-
erful, around 20% in fact. If you use the full rev range of
the engine you can take advantage of exceptional low speed 2495cc petrol, overhead valve:
torque, and if you are prepared to run the revs up you can get
The final development of Land Rover’s ohv petrol ‘four’,
rapid acceleration. However, stick with the mid range (2000-
with hardened valve seats which allow running on unlead-
3000rpm) and its only slightly better than a 2.25. Where the
ed (or LPG). Lots of torque, and similar power output to
6 shows it potential most is on hills. Where a 2.25 would
the 2.5TD, but without the reliability issues (see below).
start losing speed, the 6 just keeps pulling. Also the Weslake
A much underrated engine: works well with LPG, easy to
head on either the 2.6 (Rover P4 110 engine) or 3 litre won’t
maintain, and 2.5 petrol Landies tend to be much cheaper
fit without modification to the clutch pedal box. However,
than diesels. Buy now while stocks last.
the early non-Weslake 3 litre drops straight in.”
2495cc turbodiesel, overhead valve, sel engines led Land Rover to develop an all-new engine
for the second generation Discovery, and this also found its
type 19J: way into the Defender. The TD5 features electronic control
of the fuel injection system (with a control unit under the
Given the strength and reliability of the 2.5 diesel, you can driver’s seat), ‘drive by wire’ throttle and other refinements,
understand why Land Rover thought it would cope with all aimed at minimising exhaust emissions. Early reaction
turbocharging, but the result was a warranty nightmare. was mixed: the TD5 was much easier to stall than the earlier
2.5TDs can fail in any number of ways, but the most com- diesel engines (a characteristic shared by many of the lat-
mon seems to be internal cracks developing in the cylinder est generation of environment-friendly diesels) and there
block. This gives the same symptoms as a blown head gas- were reports of oil pump failures, cylinder head problems
ket or cracked cylinder head, but is not repairable. Due to and other reliability issues - but not on anything like the
a defective design of crankcase breather, these engines also scale of the 2.5TD fiasco in the Eighties. In any case, these
tend to dump large amounts of engine oil into the air filter issues appear to have been resolved, and the TD5 has turned
housing, which turns the paper air filter into a soggy black out to be a lovely engine - much smoother than the old TDi,
lump. This in turn leads to oil being drawn into the air in- and it sounds better too.
take, causing the engine to ‘run away’ and self-destruct.
Land Rover introduced a new cylinder block for the 2.5 Tur- Non Land Rover engines:
bodiesel (part no. ERR479) from engine number 19J27515C.
I have not been able to confirm, but suspect that this block The weaknesses of some of the earlier engines re-
was strengthened to get round the block cracking problems sulted in a thriving industry fitting engines from vari-
I would consider rebuilding a later engine, but not one of ous manufacturers to Land Rovers. Before the 200TDi,
the earlier ones. In general, if the vehicle itself is any good, if you wanted a powerful, reliable diesel engine in
the sensible thing to do is to upgrade to a 200TDi (see be- your Land Rover, a conversion was the only way to
low), or for old and tatty TDs the 2495cc non-turbo engine go. Popular engine swaps over the years have included:
is a very straightforward swap, with only the air intake hose
and exhaust system needing to be changed. ♦ Perkins 4.203 and 4.236 - big, slow-revving industrial
engines, lots of torque but not much speed
♦ Ford 2.5 York diesel (horrible) and 2.5Di (excellent)
2495cc turbodiesel, overhead valve, ♦ Perkins Prima 2.0 turbodiesel (best bit of an Austin
Montego)
200TDi and 300TDi:
♦ Peugeot 2.3 and 2.5 diesel - slow but durable
Second time lucky for Land Rover. The lessons learned from
the 2.5TD were incorporated into the new TDi engines ♦ Almost every Japanese diesel between 2.0 and 3.5 litres
available in the Defender and Discovery from 1990. The
cylinder block still looked familiar (although strengthened
internally with an aluminium ladder frame bolted to the These days, the most popular engine swap is the 200TDi.
bearing caps) but the cylinder head was all-new and a direct This engine, sourced from a Defender, will bolt into any
injection fuel system was used. These engines have gained four-cylinder Ninety or One Ten with the minimum of
an impressive reputation for power and durability. Defender modifications. The 300TDi needs more work (it is designed
engines produced 107bhp, Discovery engines (with different to fit the later R380 gearbox, rather than the LT77 used in
manifolding and a couple of other small changes) 111bhp. the older vehicles) and ex-Discovery TDis also need some
The 300TDi has a single serpentine drive belt for alternator, modifications to make them fit. The 200TDi will also fit
power steering etc, better soundproofing and a few small in- a Series II, IIA or III Landie with some work, and I have
ternal differences compare to the 200TDi. Power outputs of developed the ‘200Di’ conversion - basically a derated, non-
the two engines are identical. Though no longer offered in turbo version of this engine - specifically for Series applica-
Europe (due to emissions regulations) the 300TDi remains tions.
available in some export markets.
141xxxxxx - 145xxxxxx: Series II 88 inch petrol 271xxxxxx - 275xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch diesel
146xxxxxx - 150xxxxxx: Series II 88 inch diesel 276xxxxxx - 280xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch diesel
151xxxxxx - 155xxxxxx: Series II 109 inch petrol 281xxxxxx - 285xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch diesel station
wagon
222xxxxxx - 229xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch petrol One 310xxxxxx - 310xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch airportable
Tonne 6 cylinder (military)
231xxxxxx - 235xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch petrol One 315xxxxxx - 319xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch petrol station
Tonne wagon
236xxxxxx - 239xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch petrol airport- 320xxxxxx - 324xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch diesel station
able (‘Lightweight’) wagon
241xxxxxx - 245xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch petrol 325xxxxxx - 329xxxxxx: Series IIB Forward Control petrol
246xxxxxx - 250xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch petrol One 330xxxxxx - 334xxxxxx: Series IIB Forward Control petrol
Tonne 6 cylinder
251xxxxxx - 255xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch petrol 335xxxxxx - 339xxxxxx: Series IIB Forward Control diesel
259xxxxxx - 259xxxxxx: Series III 88 inch petrol 343xxxxxx - 343xxxxxx: Series IIA 109 inch petrol 6 cylin-
der station wagon (North America)
524xxxxxx - 524xxxxxx: Series IIA 88 inch petrol station 961xxxxxx - 965xxxxxx: 101 Forward Control 24 volt
wagon (North America)
VIN numbers 1979 on: (first 3 digits are SAL in all cases)
895xxxxxx - 895xxxxxx: Series III 88 inch diesel airport-
able (‘Lightweight’ - military export)
LBAAGxxxxxxxxx: Series III 88 inch diesel
931xxxxxx - 935xxxxxx: Series III 109 inch petrol station LBCAPxxxxxxxxx: Series III 109 inch petrol 6 cylinder
wagon
5. Engine History
Most older Land Rovers have had at least one engine change gaskets are very cheap, and you can clean all the old gunge
in the past. Land Rover engine designs did not change of- from the bottom of the sump at the same time.) If the crank
ten, but there are a couple of key changes which may not has a large letter ‘P’ cast into it, and is of smooth appearance,
be immediately obvious just looking at an engine, and for it is a petrol crank. If it is slightly rough looking and has no
which the serial number can be very invaluable. The most letter ‘P’ it’s a diesel crank.
obvious ones are:
This is a nice easy job and should be well within the ca-
pabilities of anyone who can change a light bulb without
getting electrocuted. First things first: before removing
your old carb, make sure that your ignition system is up to
scratch. That means plugs in good condition and correctly
gapped, points ditto, and ignition timing properly adjusted.
You will not be able to get your vehicle to run smoothly
if the ignition system is in bad shape. If your distributor
is worn out, I have brand new, good quality Lucas 45D4
reproductions in my Ebay shop.
Unless you have spent the last ten years on a desert island,
you will have noticed that environmental pressure groups
Fuel consumption
have got it in for big 4x4s. Greenpeace denounces Land OK, I admit it. Old Land Rovers, in standard form, have
Rover as ‘climate criminals’ and wants everyone to drive a really terrible fuel consumption. A 2.5 diesel Ninety might
Toyota Prius. 4x4s are portrayed as a major cause of global just see 25 to the gallon. Any four cylinder petrol will
warming, their owners as mindless status-obsessed eco- struggle to do 20, and the big beasts - straight six and V8
vandals. With more and more people taking an interest engined vehicles - can get down into single figures around
in ‘green’ issues, it is fair to ask where old Land Rovers fit town. Abysmal fuel consumption - leading to the production
into this debate, and what can be done to minimise their of huge quantities of CO2. Guilty as charged.
environmental impact.
helping to offset the damage done through its poorer fuel the new plants you are growing to replace the ones you have
consumption. harvested for fuel.
You are also helping to provide a market for components Old Land Rovers are mechanically simple and very easy
reclaimed from vehicles which really have reached the end to convert to run on biofuels - unlike modern computer-
of their useful life. On a scrap Land Rover, very little goes to controlled vehicles which will need major modification.
waste. Any reusable component will most likely be reused. There are already thousands of diesel Land Rovers running
Why? Simply because there are so many old Land Rovers on waste vegetable oil (a by-product of the catering industry).
still on the road, which creates the demand for recycled Petrol Land Rovers should be easily modified to run on
parts. Reusing parts on other vehicles has less environmental the new fuel E-85 (85% ethanol) which is now starting to
impact than melting them down for scrap. Remember that appear.
next time you are struggling in the pouring rain to remove
the back axle from a dead Landie in a breakers yard, with a
giant oily Alsatian gnawing at your ankle. Finally there is LPG - not a biofuel, but a very clean burning
fuel, and ideal for petrol engined Land Rovers. Switching
from petrol to LPG will reduce CO2 emissions by about
20%, and uses a fuel which is a by-product of natural gas
Alternative fuels extraction and might otherwise go to waste. As a short-
term measure, LPG is probably the quickest way to minimise
Here’s another thing. The reason that fuel consumption and your greenhouse gas emissions.
global warming are linked is that nearly all our current fuel
comes from a non-renewable source: crude oil. We pump it
out of the ground, refine it, burn it in vehicles, and the carbon Improving fuel consumption
contained within it, which has been harmlessly trapped for
There is plenty more you can do to improve the fuel
millions of years, combines with oxygen in the air to form
consumption of your old Land Rover.
carbon dioxide - a greenhouse gas. But there is another
group of fuels - biofuels - which are derived from growing
plants. The great thing about plants is that when growing,
1. Keep it well maintained. Make sure it is regularly serviced,
they absorb carbon dioxide and turn it into oxygen, trapping
that fuel and ignition systems are in good condition and
the carbon within their structures. You turn them into fuel,
properly set up, and that oil is clean and at the correct level,
burn the fuel, the carbon is released but then reabsorbed by
not only in the engine but also the transmission. Make sure
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the brakes are in good condition and not dragging, and that
the tyres are correctly inflated.
Glossary
When reading descriptions of Land Rovers for sale, there are many terms which might confuse the first-time buyer. Here
is a handy guide to some of the more common words and phrases, and what they mean.
A-bar
Tubular steel front crash protection bar with mounts for spotlights. Currently very fashionable as an aftermarket acces-
sory for Defenders. See photo below.
Alpine lights
Narrow oval windows to be found in the outer edges of the roof on Station Wagons. Sometimes fitted as an optional
extra to hard top Land Rovers.
Bulkhead
The structure between the engine bay and vehicle interior, to which the windscreen, front doors, front wings and bonnet
are attached. Made of mild steel and can rot badly. Very expensive to replace.
Bull bar
Large piece of ironmongery bolted to the front bumper for added crash protection. Now rather unfashionable as they are
not very pedestrian friendly. Most people fit A-bars instead.
Centre differential
Found in the transfer box in 90, 110 and Defender models. Allows permanent four wheel drive without excessive tyre
wear. Can be locked for off-road use in slippery conditions.
Chequer plate
Shiny 3mm aluminium sheet with an ‘anti-slip’ pattern. Intended for use on gangways, ramps etc, but hugely fashionable
for giving Land Rovers that tough industrial look. Now available in a huge variety of pre-cut shapes to attach to almost
every outer surface of your Land Rover. Handy for covering up minor damage to wings, sills etc., but otherwise purely
decorative.
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Chrome balls
See steering swivels
County
‘Luxury’ trim specification, found on late Series III and early 90/110. Cloth seats, headlining etc.
Dixon-Bate
Manufacturer of sturdy adjustable-height tow hitches, very popular with Land Rover users.
Double-declutching
Driving technique which allows crunch-free gearchanges on gearboxes with no (or badly worn) synchromesh. Essential
for Series II/IIA drivers, useful on more modern Land Rovers with worn gearboxes. For an explanation of how to do it,
click here.
EP90
Heavy duty gear oil, used in the gearbox (Series II/III only), transfer box, axles and steering swivels. The stuff that leaks
onto your drive.
Hard top
Van type body, usually comes with a safari door, See photo below. Can be fitted with side windows and rear seats.
Modular wheels
Popular aftermarket steel wheels, a multihole pattern with a ring of small bolts running round the edge. See photo below.
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Overdrive
Highly desirable accessory for Series vehicles, effectively adds a fifth gear for relaxed cruising.
Parabolic springs
A desirable modification for Series vehicles. A Series vehicle fitted with parabolic springs will ride just about as well as a
new Defender.
Safari door
Full depth, side-opening rear door. Standard on all station wagons, optional (although very common) on other Series
vehicles, standard on hard top 90/110 and Defenders
Salisbury axle
A heavy duty rear axle, fitted to long wheelbase Series III and One Ten vehicles. Can be fitted to earlier long wheelbase
vehicles, but requires expert welding to adapt for short wheelbase ones. Almost indestructible and therefore highly desir-
able.
Stage One
The unofficial name given to an interim model which had most of the features of the Series III, but permanent four wheel
drive and a V8 engine, also the flat front design which became standard on the 90/110 and Defender.
Station wagon
The original people carrier. Short wheelbase vehicles seat seven, long wheelbase seat ten or twelve depending on speci-
fication. Rear seats are cramped and uncomfortable for adults but brilliant for children. Comes with alpine lights and
safari door.
Steering swivels
To be found at each end of the front axle. They contain the driveshaft joints which run in a bath of EP90. The oil is pre-
vented from leaking out by a rubber seal around a large chrome ball. The chrome becomes pitted and rusty, the seal tears
and you get oil leaks. Replacing chrome balls is an involved and expensive job.
Synchromesh
The system which allows smooth, crunch free gear changes. Taken for granted on modern cars: but Series II and IIA
vehicles only had synchromesh on 3rd and 4th gear. The mechanism can wear badly on the newer vehicles, resulting in
crunchy gearchanges. These can be avoided by double-declutching.
Timing belt
Rubber toothed belt found inside all 2.5 litre Land Rover diesel engines. Must be changed according to the manufac-
turer’s service schedule: otherwise it can snap without warning, which will destroy the engine. Belt replacement quite
expensive, new engine much more so.
WWW.SERIESDIESELLANDROVER.COM
Transfer box
A two-speed gearbox which sits behind the main gearbox, and transfers the drive to the front and rear wheels. Series
vehicles have a selectable four wheel drive system, 90/110 and Defender have permanent four wheel drive with a centre
differential.
Truck cab
This is the short roof, which just covers the front seats, allowing the vehicle to be used as a pickup truck. See photo
below.
Weber carburettor
Common fitment to petrol Series vehicles, improves fuel consumption slightly but also reduces power.