i love that page on lrfaq, as it has allowed me to learn my rover's birthday, when it rolled off the line. what could be more appropriate for a guy named O'Brien, then a rover that came of the line on St. Paddy's day?!
109 NADA Registry
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This is a sticky topic.
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dormobiles
Jeremy,
I can think of 3 or 4 NADA dormobiles off the top of my head.
There are probably more but who knows?
I am located in santa cruz ca.1968 Land Rover "Park Ranger" camper **SOLD**
1967 109 **SOLD**
NADA Dormobile #601 **SOLD**
1965 IIA 88 2.5NA Diesel
1963 Mercedes 300se
1975 Volvo C303
KJ6AQKComment
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Linus
Santa Cruz. There was a red NADA on eBay a week in or so ago located in Santa Cruz that supposedly pulled Ted Kennedy's car from the water. Ever heard or seen anything about that truck?Former owner of 1967 Series IIA 109 NADA
1996 Land Rover Discovery SE7
1995 Range Rover Classic SWBComment
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Originally posted by highmileGregor
I only see #284 on WCB's website. Is there another or did you get your numbers mixed up?
I've got to dtop drinkning at work.Comment
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nada truck in santa cruz
Jeremy,
I did go look at that truck..
Its pretty rusty and in sad shape. It was once very nice. The frame has some repairs, all the door frames are rusted out. Bulkhead looks good. Interior looks very good for its age. Paint is shot, engine doesnt run, hydrualics in bad shape (brakes and clutch)
certainly not worth the asking price.1968 Land Rover "Park Ranger" camper **SOLD**
1967 109 **SOLD**
NADA Dormobile #601 **SOLD**
1965 IIA 88 2.5NA Diesel
1963 Mercedes 300se
1975 Volvo C303
KJ6AQKComment
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I have NADA number 536, which was completed on November 25th 1966 I believe.
Still has the orginal paint and interior, both of which are in reasonably good condition - the interior is actually pretty great.
A few things were changed by the previous owner to make it a bit more to their liking as a long-haul truck - it had a larger heater installed, upgraded electronics, a modern tach, overdrive, and a Chevy 250.
At the moment, I'm still struggling to find a rad that will fit. Once that's done, I'll be drivin' her around. For now, I overheat after about fifteen kilometers.Comment
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I'm currently working on the radiator thing too. I've got a Chevy 292 in my beastie. Mine is a bit of a kluge of two rads stacked on top of each other and offset to clear the steering relay. There is a rat's nest of hoses connecting all this.
My design so far is:
1. 22W X 18H X ?D radiator offset to the right of the steering relay.
2. I will then mount a 7"W x 12"H X ?D engine oil cooler above the relay. That fills the space nicely.
3. I'll then mount a 14 X 181/2 X ?D aircon heat exchanger in front of the other two.
4. I'm now looking at fans and shrouds. My preference would be to stick with the 18" engine fan and build a fan shroud to help efficiency. If this prooves to be a pain in the posterior then I'll just go with 'lecky fans in a shroud from one of the usual suppliers.
Cheers
GregorComment
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There are a couple of radiator manufacturers that specialize in custom radiators for racing and other applications. You can specify the core dimensions, number of rows, number of passes, mounts, and end tank style/hose fitting location.
A full custom one might not be cheap, but if I had to guess I would think that they likely already make one close to what you would need that would drop in.
I have a Fluidyne in the track/autox car, and am very happy with the quality, fit, etc. This is on a twin-turbo RX-7 which is pretty tight up front with intercooler and AC stuff in that location too. I think the shop I use found a Fluidyne core that was pretty close to drop-in with some minor mount fabbing and now offers this as a retail item.
This page from the Fluidyne web site has one that seems close to what you are looking for Gregor, although I do not know how the hoses are arranged on the 292:
Fluidyne is a manufacturer of High Performance cooling products such as Radiators, Oil Coolers, Transmission Coolers, Heat Exchangers and accessories.
I am guessing one to fit the Chevy ought to be way cheaper than the one for the rotary...1965 Series 2A 109 pickup dieselComment
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Originally posted by S11AThere are a couple of radiator manufacturers that specialize in custom radiators for racing and other applications. You can specify the core dimensions, number of rows, number of passes, mounts, and end tank style/hose fitting location.
A full custom one might not be cheap, but if I had to guess I would think that they likely already make one close to what you would need that would drop in.
This page from the Fluidyne web site has one that seems close to what you are looking for Gregor, although I do not know how the hoses are arranged on the 292:
Fluidyne is a manufacturer of High Performance cooling products such as Radiators, Oil Coolers, Transmission Coolers, Heat Exchangers and accessories.
I am guessing one to fit the Chevy ought to be way cheaper than the one for the rotary...
Now, of course, if I wasn't so lazy I'd just move the front cross member forward about 3" and have a nice big square hole to fill which would make it far too easy.
Cheers
GregorComment
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Swingkeel... that's a very nice looking truck you have. It's got a great patina and from the photo it appears totally stock. Not so much as a CB antenna hole drilled. What's the history? There are very few original Land Rovers left out there.
More pics please!'60 SII Station Wagon
'64 SIIA 109 Regular
'68 SIIA 88 Station WagonComment
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