Sujet : Re: 1991 ranger brake problem
De : muratlanne (at) *nospam* gmail.com (Jim Wilkins)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworkingDate : 13. Nov 2024, 00:02:10
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vh0mro$1qs2i$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
User-Agent : Microsoft Windows Live Mail 16.4.3505.912
"Snag" wrote in message
news:vh0ini$1q13r$1@dont-email.me... Dad had a '57 Jeep pickup , he swapped out the original flathead six
for a Tornado 230 overhead cam six . Weren't much for top end but it
sure could climb ! Used to really piss of the guys with their hopped up
big tire hot rod Chevy's and Fords . Dad would set the throttle at about
1500-1600 RPM and drop it in low/low/4 and just walk up the hills those
boys just spun out on . My brother "gave it away to a friend" after Dad
died .
-- Snag--------------------------------------When I was of that age for some reason Jeeps weren't common off-road in NH. VW dune buggies and older foreign cars were more popular with those who couldn't afford a Land Rover, pickups with many who could. Dirt bikes were the main choice before trikes and quads appeared, street-legal ones like mine could get themselves to / from distant trails, though I had to go around the most challenging obstacles. My buddy had a Land Rover which proved the adage that the better you have, the further in you get stuck. Usually I could get close enough to help dig out in my Beetle.In Germany I had a bicycle and an inflatable boat, either of which could carry me plus the other, and fences didn't block me. I could bicycle upstream, float down the river, then bicycle home. The grid of fire trails in forests let me go anywhere cross-country. Shell road maps were almost as detailed as topo maps and showed various ancient ruins to explore.