What, bus and all and get an Alison Auto fitted?
T1 Terry
What, bus and all and get an Alison Auto fitted?
Actually, I was thinking about asking because I remember you saying you would prefer to go for a 3 door Suzi. Do you know what yours weighs?Dot wrote:Well you did ask Leslie![]()
Why not do it the easy way and buy ours
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Horses for courses Ray. A front wheel drive run around that can be driven up over a gutter or gully or to the local mechanic to get the tail shaft fitted or removed so you have a potential 4 X 4 and a run around that can be flat towed to avoid have to use a trailer.Greynomad wrote: ↑Wed Nov 13, 2019 12:56 pm T1, I’d be wary about dropping the tailshaft of a 4WD. You might as well buy a 2WD in the first place!
Re-installing the driveshaft so you can go 4WDIng would become quite tedious.
When we bought Jim the Junior Jeep (Suzi Jimny) new in 2007, the handbook said NO FLAT TOWING under any circumstances.
Said even Gypsy-style stuff was VERBOTEN. If two wheels had to remain on the ground while towing, they had to be the FRONT wheels... impractical, as the steering lock was NOT to be relied upon to keep wheels in the straight-ahead position. (Rarely happened to lock dead-ahead anyway, so ‘crabbing’ would be the problem.)
Trailering was the only option.
Moral: Read the Owner’s Manual carefully!
A valid point Ray, but the difference in cost between the trailer, the fuel economy, the trailer rego and insurance and the wear rate of 2 tyres carrying the weight of the Jimny plus trailerGreynomad wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2019 10:37 pm T1,
My other objection to flat-towing a 4WD is financial.
A/T tyres cost me $200+ each. Trailer tyres were under $100 each.
I’d rather wear out 2 x <$100 tyres than 4 x $200+ ones for no 4WD activity. Save the A/Ts for the rough stuff they’re designed for.