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Thread: Guinness and the Rover Gods

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    57

    Default Guinness and the Rover Gods

    A note for my fellow Roverphiles .....

    I have always found that when dealing with Rovers that have a questionable history (ie probably owned by soccer mommies, lawyers out to impress, children of the rich and famous) and distinct lack of maintenance in their past it pays off well to make offerings to the Rover Gods before working on the Rover in question.......

    You will find Rover ownership is a religious experience in itself!!!

    There is nothing like laying on your back in freezing water in January, with a 2' breaker bar in hand trying to loosen the filler plug of an 87 RR Classic that last had said filler plug out in 1987 as the bloke in Sollihull installed it the first time. As said breaker bar slips and the hand and arm come in contact with various parts of the suspension (large and overengineered too!!) at an amazing amount of speed, words of religious importance flow like holy water.......... the neighbors will believe that a midwest hellfire and damnation revival is going on 3 miles away......

    Or similarly, you spend all week working in the dash to rectify the corroded connections, bad grounds, and all the other electrical gremlins, only to proudly take your signifigant other "out in the Rover" to dinner and the orchestra(of course wearing your only suit, all your other clothing is oily jeans, and Rover tshirts) only to have the evil "Prince of Darkness" close in on you on the interstate, and the Rover slowly grinds to a halt, of course the flashers dont work either .......

    Soooo.............

    Me and my fellow Rover gearheads have found a liberal dosing of Liquid wrench(most importantly; applied for 7 days in a row!!)on the suspect part, followed by the sacrifice of a bottle of generic motor oil(Napa silver 10w40 is .95 cents/qt.), and a Pint of Guiness goes a long way to pleasing these Rover Gods .

    If the above fails to help the pain of ownership, the Liquid wrench can start one heck of a fire on a cold night on the trailhead, the oil can be put in almost weekly without fear of overfilling, and the Guiness; well I think you know what to do with that.......

    Cheers,
    Jack of Bavaria
    Last edited by JSalyer; 01-05-2007 at 11:13 AM.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    Glenwood,N.B. Canada
    Posts
    57

    Default

    It takes Courage to be different
    regards; Dave
    A 1997 Discovery guy from


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Germany
    Posts
    57

    Default I AM DOOMED!!!

    I MISPELLED GUINNESS-I AM WAITING FOR BOTH OF MY ROVERS TO BURST INTO FLAMES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    twisties~South Lake Tahoe tarmac rallye style
    Posts
    733

    Default

    I fixed the spelling in the thread title. All good to go now, no worries.
    Cheers, Thompson
    Art & Creative Director, Rovers Magazine
    Rovers North, Inc.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Posts
    36

    Default

    At least you didn't misspell Rover!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Coos Bay, Oregon
    Posts
    12

    Default

    Fat Tire is easier to spell and tastes much better and doesn't have to be consumed warm.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    city of maples
    Posts
    398

    thumb-up

    Liquid wrench??? Thats Busch light isn''t it...

  8. #8

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Mudley N. Grimey
    Fat Tire is easier to spell and tastes much better and doesn't have to be consumed warm.
    It's embarrassing that a fellow Oregonian would say that. We're supposed to be more beer-savvy than that.

    That weak Colorado swill was carried in alot of places for a while, I guess due to a big marketing campaign. Thankfully, it seems to have retreated.

    When you have Oregon-brewed ambrosia like Bridgeport IPA around, there's no excuse for bad out-of-state beer.

    Oh yea, love draft Guinness, too (but never in bottles). 'best consumed sitting in a pub in Ireland.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    New Hampshire
    Posts
    62

    Default guiness and the rover gods

    I prefer a black and tan. The tan being good ole Long Trail Ale
    Possibly Vermonts best beer, and a nice smooth/dark Guiness to boot!

    Working on my Rover and having a B&T in the spring warm air of
    New England! (wishful thinking)
    Last edited by landrover77; 03-20-2007 at 10:50 PM.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    twisties~South Lake Tahoe tarmac rallye style
    Posts
    733

    Default

    Well, it's not quite warm spring up here yet... But since you guys want to talk about beer - kewl!

    Living in Northern Vermont we have a plethora of breweries to sample from. My personal *local favourite Vermont brew* is of course Trout River Scottish Ale.

    But, my hands down all time favourite brew is McEwan's Scotch Ale.



    "McEwan's Scotch Ale Brewed by Scottish Courage Ltd. in Edinburgh, originally by appointment to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II. Reddish brown in color, with caramel, cherry, apple, treacle aromas. Th`e flavor is lightly smoky, with a soft buttery background and a creamy malt finish. The aroma intensifies as it warms and has a light sherry note. 8 percent ABV."

    Be careful of this potent elixer, you might get your spanners mixed with your gas grips. A bloody knuckles club soother fur sur .
    Cheers, Thompson
    Art & Creative Director, Rovers Magazine
    Rovers North, Inc.

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