So I've been a little distracted...
'98 Discovery 1 ES with a 300Tdi and ZF 4HP22. Within about two weeks of moving 100+ miles away work informed me that as the pandemic seems to be over the hump they want to see people attending the office again. With only one car on the road this wasn't really going to work so I decided to see what I could find to run around in for the winter until the Range Rover is sorted. No decent 306s or 405s seemed to be out there at the time. Decent old Volvos are as hard to find as Peugeots so sticking with what I know wasn't going to work. Didn't take me long to convince myself that actually, I could do worse than an old Disco as at least it would probably hold value and, with the licence rules changing, I would be able to tow things with it (Range Rover for paint etc). Man maths won and I started looking about.
First one I went to see was identical to this one. MOT history was terrible, it was further away than advertised and turned out to be totally rotten - literally no inner cills at all. One of the brake lines had burst when the seller ran it up to temperature before I arrived so it was hot and standing over a puddle of brake fluid. The wiring had been messed with. Most of the electrics didn't work including the ABS. First time I've ever walked away from a car!
Next one to look at was absolutely miles away in the Thames estuary and there was a fuel crisis by the time the seller and I were both available the same day. Still, seemed to be plenty of fuel here in Nottingham so how bad could it be? Had a look over it and agreed to buy. Didn't realise that, although there seemed to be plenty of fuel in Nottingham, there was absolutely no diesel within the nearest towns to the seller. I had told my other half I'd be back by about 2100hrs and ended up arriving at 0200 the next morning. Between that and an earth issue that saw it refusing to start a few days later it wasn't an auspicious start but it seems to have settled into a new home where it actually gets used now.
I'm loving having a landy on the road of my own finally. 300Tdi is really nice too (quite fancy one in the Ranger Rover to be honest). I've given it a set of Toyo Opencountry AT tyres, changed the oil and filters, replaced the 3 piece manifold gasket shown below (much cheaper than a turbo but makes a similar horrible screeching noise when failed), bodged the rust in the floors to keep the carpets dry and swapped some parts from a less worn breaker locally. All in all, pretty happy.
Took us on a short break to the North Yorkshire Moors. Learned not to take the other half on greenlanes without recceing in advance. Rutland Rigg was very pretty but a lot more rutted than reports on Trailwise suggested! Shed in photo was significantly less value for money than taking a caravan would have been in my opinion.
Other than being distracted by that, I have also been doing jobs related to the Range Rover. I had to get the new garage sorted before I started working on the car else I'd never get around to it. I haven't totally succeeded on that front as the top of the workbench still isn't attached but it's getting there. Finally last week I finished soldering the air lines and started to work on the Range Rover again having waited until the evenings are really short.
First job was to get a load of the grinding done on the O/S inner wing so that I could fit the battery tray. With that done and the tray welded in I decided to waste some time by test fitting everything that mounts to that side of the engine bay. I'm pleased to say that it all fits, including the previously missing charcoal canister which I managed to find new old stock with bracket for less than the price from a breakers. Forgot to take a photo of all this before I plonked the bonnet on so you'll have to take my word for it. New headlight looks good though? Going to need to find a grill, badge and corner lights though as they're going to look terrible in comparison once the bonnet is painted nice.
This afternoon I've been back at it again taking all that back off again and then annoying the new neighbours grinding more welds back. Here's a few shots of the inner wing as it stands this evening.
More soon hopefully. I have a new deadline as the Disco needs welding for its next MOT in April so this needs to be on the road for then.
Rich