Colthebrummie
Well-Known Member
You could of course split the journey and have an overnight stay at the halfway point. The fun is in the journey not the arriving.
Col
Col
Especially if you are going to Scotland!You could of course split the journey and have an overnight stay at the halfway point. The fun is in the journey not the arriving.
Col
Leave it alone, if you want to cruise on the motorway you have the wrong vehicle. Series 1 with original engines have been driven from London to Singapore, all round the NW 500 and to the South Of France and back. Doing this "adventure" with the original engine is a badge of honour money can't buy so don't waste £3000 on labour, 20% drop in value and no inner glow of achievement. When I was looking for my Series I looked and one that was just needed a bit too much work, it was a 6 seater safari LWB and it had been driven 4 up to Cannes and back on its 2.25D. Owner told me they did 45mph the whole way and had a fantastic time. If you want the scenery to go by fast don't do the trip in a Series, if you want to enjoy the scenery then do.
I agree, it would be a great shame to ruin the originality of a series 1. If I was the owner, I would hire a car for the Scotland trip, probably be cheaper in the long run.He's behaving like a girl. "I've met this great bloke....but I just need to change this, and this, and this, and this...." We all know it doesn't work. I'm sure 90% of the blokes on here have experienced it. I feel for that S1, it will never be right for him. First the engine, then the brakes, then box, eventually he'll turn it into a Defender, but it won't be a Defender so he still won't be satisfied. Buy what you like and keep liking it as it is. If you don't like it buy something different. Sounds like the OP needs a Defender not an S1.
The problem with that is, you will probably have to wait for several hours for the AA/RAC to turn up. I agree about using a scenic route though.Join the AA or RAC. Create a fault and get relayed to Inverness. Join the 30-40mph brigade of elderly camper vans doing the NC500. Enjoy the scenery. Enjoy the achievement. Sell the S1 and return home, adventure done!
Unless you are lucky enough to get a local contractor. We have to respond within 75 minutes....whereas their own crews can take forever.The problem with that is, you will probably have to wait for several hours for the AA/RAC to turn up. I agree about using a scenic route though.
Col
I've often wondered if it's the engine or the gearbox that is a limiting factor speed wise, not having a reliable tacho, I've no idea how many revs the engine is doing. I always the gearbox will blow up before the engine. Col
I'm not really up on these different engine designation codes, what vehicle is a p5 engine from?It's the engine
I had a 6 cyl. S3 SW that wasn't really any faster than a 2.25L on the open road.
Retrofitted a P5 engine (straight swop onto the bellhousing & engine mounts) with overdrive the car would cruise at the legal limit all day. I wound it up on a quiet dual carriageway late one night & lost my bottle when the needle went into the 'eighties
I'm not really up on these different engine designation codes, what vehicle is a p5 engine from?
Col
I'm sure @norseman will be back but I think the engine he refers to is a 3 litre version of the land Rover 2.6 6 Cyl engine. It had a 'Westlake' head and produced 115 bhpRover as in P5/P5B and P6/P6B...B indicating Buick V8...I would suggest...
I'm sure @norseman will be back but I think the engine he refers to is a 3 litre version of the land Rover 2.6 6 Cyl engine. It had a 'Westlake' head and produced 115 bhp
Rover P5 - Wikipedia
If the original engine was a2.6 6 cylinder then yes as the bulkhead (and bellhousing?) was modified to accommodate the engine.Well, I did wonder if it was the Rover P5 that was meant but I didn't think an engine from one of those would easily fit onto a s3 gearbox.
Col