Bezdonian
Active Member
- Posts
- 89
- Location
- Canterbury
Good Morning Everyone
This is my Swiss army 109 project. So lets start off with the elephant in the room.
Yes, the Swiss army in the 60s-70s did in fact have both 88s and 109s series 2/2a and 3 land Rovers for the Fortress/Bunker troops (109s) and Training exercises (88s).
So my Series 2a is a March 1969 suffix F 109 station wagon, which I intend to drive as a semi daily driver or around 130 miles a week. I'm also a reenactor who funnily enough portrays the Cold war and WW2 swiss army along with my group so it would also be a fine addition along with the 1970s Pinzgauer.
The aim of the project it to essentially Convert a semi modified 109 into a swiss station wagon. Which will involve replacing what's broken, repainting the entire body (it will be completely stripped right down to the chassis). Checking the chassis but will probably replace it as I'm certain there's barely of the original material left with lots of patches. Then adding the relevant swiss modifications and improving the overall usability like: power steering, slick shift, uprated heater matrix, Insulation and sound deadening in a sympathetic manor.
Of course questions, tips and tricks or advice is always appreciated. As although I'm not new to land rovers, I am new to series 2s so it should be a learning experience for me.
Here are some Swiss land rovers for reference
This is my Swiss army 109 project. So lets start off with the elephant in the room.
Yes, the Swiss army in the 60s-70s did in fact have both 88s and 109s series 2/2a and 3 land Rovers for the Fortress/Bunker troops (109s) and Training exercises (88s).
So my Series 2a is a March 1969 suffix F 109 station wagon, which I intend to drive as a semi daily driver or around 130 miles a week. I'm also a reenactor who funnily enough portrays the Cold war and WW2 swiss army along with my group so it would also be a fine addition along with the 1970s Pinzgauer.
The aim of the project it to essentially Convert a semi modified 109 into a swiss station wagon. Which will involve replacing what's broken, repainting the entire body (it will be completely stripped right down to the chassis). Checking the chassis but will probably replace it as I'm certain there's barely of the original material left with lots of patches. Then adding the relevant swiss modifications and improving the overall usability like: power steering, slick shift, uprated heater matrix, Insulation and sound deadening in a sympathetic manor.
Of course questions, tips and tricks or advice is always appreciated. As although I'm not new to land rovers, I am new to series 2s so it should be a learning experience for me.
Here are some Swiss land rovers for reference
Attachments
Last edited: