Thanks for the replies guys...
Well, after taking delivery of my old beast and giving her a full service, I decided to take her for a long drive as a sort of "getting to know you" thing. I'm currently out checking a few sites up near Tamworth (I work/live on the Central Coast/Sydney) and have taken the Rangie for the drive, and so far its performed faultlessly. Used maybe a litre or two of oil, but I think that's to be expected for a car of this age, over 600kms of driving (plus the leaks

). Its been pretty funny though. Usually when I do long trips for work I take our company car, which is a nice little Merc. The look on the client's faces when I pulled up in a beaten up blue Rangie with most of the paint missing was priceless!
It amazes me how comfortable this old beast is - dirt road driving with coils and full-time 4WD is great! Better than an 80 series IMHO. Fuel's not too bad for an old V8. I've filled the tank once at 500ks and that cost me about $70. It gets a bit noisy after a while with the V8 running through a 2.5" system - but I love it
By the way, my Rangie's running 24 spline axles on the rear airlocker (hence the spare disco diff), but only 10 spline at front.
In terms of things me and the Rangie have learnt about each other so far:
- the sender on the fuel tank gets stuck below about 1/4 tank, and once you fill up again, the tank needs a bit of a hit to get it working again.
- my highbeam/indicator stalk is a bit old, so when you hit high-beam, you've also got to indicate left, else you'll be left in the dark.
- the oil temp appears to be running high on the guage, but not in reality
- I have to remember to hit the thermo fans when driving slowly
Thanks again for the welcome, and hopefully I can get a chance to meet some of you out on the tracks soon! I still haven't had a chance to get the Rover properly off-road, and I'm itching to big time
