Looking smart! It's a nice colour that! I reckon you should get the rear glass tinted John.Spent a couple of hours washing and promising him, which is the first time in 6 months.
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I like it, but the colour definitely looks better in the sunshine, as the pearlescent effect shows better.Looking smart! It's a nice colour that! I reckon you should get the rear glass tinted John.
WOW, I'm glad it's come through virtually unscathed, I think the bonnet is galvanised or has some other treatment, that's why it has that dull grey look where the paint is missing. I had a 1986 BMW 320i which was hit on the front wing whilst parked & it had the same dull look under the missing paint & that never went rusty either. Glad no one was in or near where that tree come down. Hope you can get it sorted soon, all the best.Not quite today, but a little mishap has kept me off here for a while, having to work, and then spend spare time clearing a large tree that decided to come crashing down on the Freelander I’d spent so much time (and money) on getting road worthy last year. Noooo!..... It happened in that storm at the end of November. I saw it come down and my heart sank seeing it covering the front half of the vehicle. But thankfully the damage wasn’t as bad as it could have been. And I’ve got away with only dents on the bonnet. (Upon cutting up the tree with a cheap Far Eastern generic chainsaw I bought from Toolstation, (which did the whole job amazingly), I found that an 18” long 4” diameter branch had speared itself deep into the ground under one of the main trunks, which is probably what saved more weight of the tree not ending up on the Freelander).
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Being silver (Zambizi 737 apparently) it expect finding an exact colour match to be difficult. But hopefully the clamshell lines and curves on the bonnet will disguise any batch mismatch as much as possible, as I try to find that colour code from a scrappy.
I’m still driving around with the exposed metal from that larger dent, which I would have though by now would have been as rusty as hell with all the salt on the roads. But surprisingly it’s holding up quite well, so must be a sign that they gave those bonnets some reasonable anticorrosion treatment before painting.
I feel your pain.clearing a large tree that decided to come crashing down on the Freelander
I had some of those pigtail pins in mine, they worked well too, and having clear heads, didn't show up too badly.Put some more drawing pins in the headlining. I'll sort it properly one day!
Last time I had a worn clutch it was OK in first and 2nd but in 3rd and 4th it slipped when applying the throttle. I could hear the engine revs rising but the speed didn't change.Clutch test?
I was just reading Oilydiff’s writing above on their clutch issue…
Recently I was on a sandy beach with my small trailer on. It has small 8" rims and quite skinny tyres and as you might guess. With a small load of sand in the trailer I couldn't get out. Stuck Happily a passing Disco 1 was on the main road beside the beach, saw me and stopped, offered help which was much appreciated.
Now the K series 1.8 just didn't have enough power to really get all the wheels working on the sand, the front dug in as did the back. At one point I thought there was no wheels turning, engine revving but nothing. Was starting to suspect a stuffed clutch. I wasn't struggling on the beach for ages just 3 attempts then accepted that offer of a tow. The FL drives as it always has and I towed my trailer home on Monday, 300+ km, without any issue.
What is/are the tests to check the condition of the clutch operation.
I had an 'issue' reversing the boat up the drive (in desperate need of a pee after a long drive way rather impatient and the trailer was stuck on a post). Needless to say that I realised I should pee and start again when the smell of the clutch was far to evident to ignore! That was probably 9 or 10 years ago and on the same clutch. It is quite juddery pulling away though, doesn't like low revs.Clutch test?
I was just reading Oilydiff’s writing above on their clutch issue…
Recently I was on a sandy beach with my small trailer on. It has small 8" rims and quite skinny tyres and as you might guess. With a small load of sand in the trailer I couldn't get out. Stuck Happily a passing Disco 1 was on the main road beside the beach, saw me and stopped, offered help which was much appreciated.
Now the K series 1.8 just didn't have enough power to really get all the wheels working on the sand, the front dug in as did the back. At one point I thought there was no wheels turning, engine revving but nothing. Was starting to suspect a stuffed clutch. I wasn't struggling on the beach for ages just 3 attempts then accepted that offer of a tow. The FL drives as it always has and I towed my trailer home on Monday, 300+ km, without any issue.
What is/are the tests to check the condition of the clutch operation.
Those were the symptoms on my son's Beemer - would pull away from a stand still OK, but accellerating in higher gears would slip the clutch.Last time I had a worn clutch it was OK in first and 2nd but in 3rd and 4th it slipped when applying the throttle. I could hear the engine revs rising but the speed didn't change.
I guess on a hill or towing it would have been bad in 1st and 2nd too.