August is a good time to hit the road, especially if you live in drought-stricken southern California. So聽I threw my dog, my bow, and my mountaineering gear into my 1999 Land Rover Discovery SD, and took off for Seattle.聽
According to the Internet, Land Rovers, especially old ones with 100,000-plus miles on them like mine, are so unreliable that you could never count on them to complete a 3,000-mile road trip without breaking down. At least once. Especially not a trip that includes long days of 85-mile-per-hour聽highway cruising and聽hours spent sitting in hot rush hour traffic鈥攊nterspersed with some聽off-roading. In fact, that鈥檚 about the most mechanically challenging combination of events I could think of.聽
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And this particular Land Rover was not built with highway capability in mind. With incredibly heavy, custom-lathed driveshafts, 33-inch BF Goodrich Mud Terrain tires, full-floating axles, and aftermarket steel wheels, this thing has a ton of momentum in its drivetrain. To change the speed of the vehicle, whether that鈥檚 speeding up or slowing down, you first have to overcome the combined momentum of all those heavy things underneath the truck. So it鈥檚 not fast, and while the D90 brake calipers ultimately do provide more than adequate power, it鈥檚 not quick to brake either.聽
Those drive shafts were spec鈥檇 to overcome one of the Land Rover鈥檚 weak points鈥攖he stock items are prone to shearing off at speed鈥攂ut the downside is that, even though they鈥檙e balanced, they induce some harmonic vibration to the truck at certain speeds. One of those speed ranges is 75 to聽80 miles per hour鈥攔ight where I鈥檇 typically like to be cruising on the highway. It鈥檚 more character than it is a problem, but I鈥檝e still been looking for ways to drive around it. I could slow down, but that sounds boring. So my solution, as I鈥檝e gained confidence in the lifted truck鈥檚鈥unique handling has simply been to speed up. Eighty-five miles per hour is my new sweet spot.聽
One of the things that that I鈥檝e learned driving this thing is just how critical tire pressures are to virtually every aspect of a vehicle鈥檚 performance. That鈥檚 equally true in your Prius, but these huge mud terrains really emphasize the effects of even slightly non-optimal PSI. Over聽1,200 miles in, arriving in Seattle, I was convinced my bushings were shot, the truck was just shimmying that badly over bumps. I even went so far as to text my buddy Matt at ARB to see if their shop would have time for me to come in and swap them out while I was in town. Then I thought to get out the pressure gauge, only to find that the right rear was down 10 PSI and, once corrected, that聽fixed the crooked steering wheel I thought I was going to have to correct聽with the steering box. You may not have to worry about bump steer and death wobbles on your econobox, but this is a good reminder that even there, just being off by a few PSI can significantly impact everything from your handling, to fuel economy, and even your outright safety on the road. Buy a good pressure gauge聽and check your tires weekly.聽
I was in Seattle for the month to go bow hunting with my buddy Griff, climb a mountain with my buddy Martin, and to be around for the birth of my buddy Ty鈥檚 first kid. The only thing that went according to plan was Mount聽Baker鈥攖he bear wouldn鈥檛 come out to play聽and Wilder only popped out after I鈥檇 driven home鈥攂ut I did manage to make a new friend while I was up there. Owen climbed the mountain with us, and it turned out he has a thing for unreliable old British trucks too, so we hit it off immediately. I stayed in his tiny home on Puget Sound for a week, and there we performed the most serious work I鈥檝e done to the Land Rover since I bought it in February: its second oil change.聽
One of the unexpected benefits of driving a lifted vehicle is how easy they are to work on. So far, jack stands and wheel ramps have been totally unnecessary (although I will need stands to pull the wheels off and apply some grease to the brake pads this weekend). Even accessing the 4.0-liter V8鈥檚 drain plug is just a matter of kneeling down under the front bumper, and reaching with a 1 and 1/8-inch crescent wrench. I can change the oil filter while sitting cross legged, and was able to grease the U-joints while lying on a piece of cardboard. That convenience is nice, but the big benefit is really safety. Despite this Land Rover鈥檚 total reliability thus far, it is inevitable that something on it will break at some point, and that will likely be off-road, where jacking isn鈥檛 really the safest thing to do. Being able to get underneath, with plenty of room for tools, a helping hand, and a beer鈥攁nd all without a 5,000 lbs vehicle just waiting to fall on you鈥攊s going to make that pending break down much less bad.聽
One of the things I鈥檓 hoping to achieve with this irregular unreliable old vehicle column (I鈥檒l roll in the KTM soon, promise) is to break through the Internet hive mind, and show you that you don鈥檛 need to be intimidated by the prospect of owning something awesome, but old. With vehicles like these, reliability isn鈥檛 a product of a badge, a country of origin, or some secret sauce from Toyota. It鈥檚 a matter of maintenance. By creating a regular schedule of simple-to-achieve jobs, and by replacing wear items before they fail, you too can drive something you鈥檝e always lusted after, and do that without a monthly payment, or even regular rides in a tow truck. After this trip, I鈥檝e racked up a total of 6,000 miles on the Discovery, so some of those service jobs, and even major work like a head gasket replacement are looming. And you鈥檒l be reading about them soon.聽
Why put up with a vehicle that鈥檚 got a bad reputation聽and compromised on-road handling? Well, on the way home, I looked at a map, picked what looked like the most remote dirt trail I could find, then just turned off the highway and drove down it until I found a place that looked good for camping. There, Wiley and I cooked a T-bone over a fire, howled at the moon, and listened to real wolves howl back. This Land Rover can take us anywhere, including many places most other people will never visit. That鈥檚 what makes it worthwhile to me.聽