Why cover it, it will keep it from gaining patina, and it should be driven in the winter, at least on Sunday trips to the grocery store. I understand the value of these trucks are rising, but they will never be the garage queen Ferrari, so no one makes a cover for them.
Bad gas mileage gets you to some of the greatest places on earth.
Just be careful--long-term outside storage under a tarp or tight cover will help everything corrode to dust by trapping and condensing atmospheric moisture.
There are TONS of examples of formerly-nice cars that are now Swiss cheese because they were lovingly covered by their caring owners 10 years ago.
--Mark
1973 SIII 109 RHD 2.5NA Diesel
0-54mph in just under 11.5 minutes
(9.7 minutes now that she's a 3-door).
I don't consider anything he does as "real-world" That dood has been out on the ragged fringe for quite some time. I guess people still give him money. I was being sarcastic if you need to be 'splained to.
If he's getting that for that truck, that puts mine in the same range.
I swear that one has been listed before. I remember the comments last time it came up, including but not limited to "for $140k they could at least paint the shifter"
I would have to agree with the others who say not to cover it. The tarp will only trap moisture and create a bigger hassle. I take it your concerned about the salt in the air? I don't believe there is an effective way of dealing with that short of preventative waxoyling and/or moving your truck inland to the seasons you won't use it.
I don't consider anything he does as "real-world" That dood has been out on the ragged fringe for quite some time. I guess people still give him money. I was being sarcastic if you need to be 'splained to.
No Bill, I don't need to be "'splained to" I got it, I just never expected anyone to hold Dare Britannia up as an example of anything but piss-poor pricing, quite frankly it was everything I could do to keep from wearing my coffee when I read your post.
A blue tarp will trap moisture if it is wrapped tightly. If you are looking to just have a 'roof' over it then use a blue tarp with some non-damaging 'spacers' against the Rover to make sure there is air flow of sorts. No need to give it a 'burrito wrap' if you are looking to just keep the worst of the elements off of it.
1958 107 SW - Sold to a better home
1965 109 SW - nearly running well
1966 88 SW - running but needing attention
1969 109 P-UP
If you're looking into long term storage, and a dry/rust preventative option, check out www.carbag.com. They include large area dehumidifying bags that are enclosed with the vehicle.
1968 Series IIa
1997 Defender SW (Original Owner - Sold)
Checkout eBay.co.uk and just search for "Land Rover Series car cover" and a bunch of places that ship internationally will show up. I bought one from seller pjcovers555 called the stormforce. Waterproof breathable fabric that fits the 109 perfectly. A bit stiff and bulky but good for keeping the sun and bird crap off it and limiting the amount of water that seems to find its way into a Landy. Definitely do not use a blue tarp that will only trap moisture/salt and rub on the surfaces and make things much worse. I am all for patina but show your 40+ land rover a little love and take 10 mins to cover it up before bed! Cheers, Larry
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