Those are 'Disco's' and you are right about the stock tires. But look
where they are stuck! They do get way back in there, even just bone
stock. If they had bigger tires under there, they would have the
clearance to follow easy in most places, but that snow stuck would have
bogged anything with less than 35" tires on it. Serious mud under that
snow....
The one gent in the blue one in the dark photos got hauled into the back
of the Dealer when he was there for a tune up and he though he was in
**** or something and the whole back shop gave him a standing ovation
for all the mud they found under it. LOL!
I still send out regular invites to a couple LR folks to join us on our
Jeep runs. They show up lots too. We have bone stock Jeeps on our runs
too, our Cherokee is bone stock so giving a tug here and there is
expected by all....
In the place we used to wheel where those shots are from, the LR factory
team used to bring folks in to learn how to drive their rigs.
Unfortunatly non off roaders ruined the area due to major construction
waste dumping and stolen car dumping. It got closed down. :-(
I am in Canada and even used those things cost a fortune. I was trying
to find an old one when I went 4x4 shopping and couldn't touch anything
I saw with the money I had to spend. If it runs it is worth more than
$5000.00 period no matter the shape or milage.
I looked at yours. It looks like it will run nice!
I sill like my CJ7 or any old CJ best out of 'all' types of 4x4's. I
love the 'classic' face and shape and the ease of repair. Mine is the
white one in those photos, she goes really nice and is a daily driver.
Mike
86/00 CJ7 Laredo, 33x9.5 BFG Muds, 'glass nose to tail in '00
88 Cherokee 235 BFG AT's
Corey Shuman wrote:
>
> I agree that they both have their place, believe me nothing is more
> frustrating than the person who spends a ton of money on an SUV for it
> to be never driven off road. However.. those pics appear to be of a
> bone stock Disco II with street tires. So I think that the driver is
> more of the issue here. There are tons of pics on Discoweb.org of
> Discoveries that have minimal to extreme mods which would not be
> getting stuck in that type of puddle. As to the wheelbase they are
> pretty close. A Discovery being 100" and a Defender being 92.9, as
> opposed to the TJ 93.4" and the GC at 105.9". I think that the approach
> and departure angle are where the Jeep may have a slight advantage, at
> least over the Discovery. The TJ approach/departure being 41.8/31.3
> respectively as to the Discovery 34.3/29.8 however that is a stock
> measurement. the addition of and aftermarket bumper, such as the arb or
> the SG will bring your approach angle over 50 degrees which is far
> better than you get with the stock jeep.
> I have some pics of my own Discovery up on www.goldrushexpeditions.com
> , it is used as an expedition vehicle and performs very well. and yes..
> if you look there is even a pic of the rover pulling out a Jeep
> too...To each his own but I wouldnt rule it out when looking for a good
> used vehicle.