Anyone got any tips of the best way to sleep in a 110? I am thinking of making some boards to go over the back wheel panels and put an air matress on it?
Welcome to landyzone. :welcome2:
Gis a clue? what sort of 110 have you got? :doh:
It's Blue, does that help? snigger
Anyone got any tips of the best way to sleep in a 110? I am thinking of making some boards to go over the back wheel panels and put an air matress on it?
Thats why Landys with a canvas tilt are warmer than those with a hard top. Plus you dont get condensation dripping down your neck all night long.Sleeping in a vehicle is bloody cold. Unless it is honking with rain, I'd sooner sleep next to it with a tarp or something stretched from the side down over me. It'll be particularly cold in a landy - all the exposed metal refrigerates you nicely. Speaking from experience as ex-mil, I all but gave up on using the L/R unless it was absolutely life-threatening outside. Then I didn't really sleep, but tended to doze shivering until the night ended. Not recommended as a voluntary option!
Top tip. I knew two lads who decided to sleep under their Scorpion rather than put up a bivvi. Almost the last sleep they ever needed. Heard of many others who weren't so lucky.(Edit - and just in case anyone thinks it's a bright idea - do not, ever, sleep under a vehicle. You do not want to learn the hard way what happens if it settles a few inches in soft ground with you trapped under it at 0300 on your own...)
or go to sleep drinking a bottle of jack daniels
The girlfriends looking well, Buster ...
Cheers muchly... but that's the wife and dug.... sshhhhhhhThe girlfriends looking well, Buster ...
hahahahahaaahhaahaa:d:d:daye & their kids look lovely. Think they've got their fathers eyes though
:d :d :d :d
Works a treatThe aditional support given by the case of bottled beer seems a simple and effective dual purpose solution and simple to fit.... inovation at its finest.