Landy Roll Cages not V8 sorry

Day To Day Chat Area, So Forum Topic's Don't Get Spammed Up.

Moderator: phpBB2 - Administrators

Post Reply
kev_the_mole
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 1022
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 9:41 pm
Location: Las Islas Purbequias

Landy Roll Cages not V8 sorry

Post by kev_the_mole »

Internal? External? Pros and cons? Recommendations etc.

for 2005 Defender 90 TD5

All info greatly accepted. Hopefully will keep girlfriend alive next time she swerves off road to avoid £$%%%ing deer!

Cheers,

Ian


Image


It's an engine Jim.....but not as we know it ;)
kiwicar
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 5461
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 5:00 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Post by kiwicar »

My understanding always was that strength wise there was little to choose between internal or extrenal, however if it is a full cage infront of the bulkhead then external is better as you don't brain youself on it every time you hit a big bump and it will obviously protect the outer panels which an intermal one won't. They are meant to be a bit easier to fit aswell. If you get one with the bar above the front bulkheadat the base of the windscreen they are meant to be the strongest, though the wipers can be a problem. Much easier to tie the fresh venerson to to get it home without getting the inside all yucky with an external :twisted:
Is it a station wagon, SWB/LWB, pickup?
Hope the girlfriend is OK, they are not good things to hit, I made a right mess of the wife's vectra a few years ago with one.
Best of luck
Mike
poppet valves rule!
User avatar
mikeinatruck
Helpful or Confused
Helpful or Confused
Posts: 105
Joined: Tue Feb 06, 2007 8:48 am

Post by mikeinatruck »

By the sound of your post the Landy took an unplanned off roading excursion?
If it was me I would go for the external option, looks good and gives the body a lot of protection and you dont lose any internal space, also handy if your off roading as you can lean on trees...

Numerous options depending on your budget.
www.whitbread-offroad.co.uk
www.northoffroad.co.uk
www.protectionandperformance.co.uk
kev_the_mole
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 1022
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 9:41 pm
Location: Las Islas Purbequias

Post by kev_the_mole »

Mike,

it's a SWB and she's OK. There was no damage to her or (thank God) the car but want to make sure if she does swerve to miss something small and cuddly she's still as OK as she could be :D :D :D

Training her not to swerve for fluffy bunnies unfortunately not an option. It's a girl thang!

Cheers,

Ian
Image


It's an engine Jim.....but not as we know it ;)
kiwicar
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 5461
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 5:00 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Post by kiwicar »

Good news all is OK
If its a SWB there are alot of kits for external cages so I would definatly go that route. I would have one with a diagonal behind the seats (they normally have this hoop internally with the roof pannel sandwiched between the internal and external parts of the cage) as the Landy is still a heavy beast! the swerving to avoid small fury animals is a big problem :( my nephew has been off work for 18 months after missing a fox and hittind an armco instead, he detached three ribs which have not re- attached and probably never will, and wrecked tendons all up his back and neck, it has wrecked his life all for a furry that would have probably got out of his way any way (if he had remained in control of the car).
I'm sorry furrys and body work can be replaced.
all the best
Mike
poppet valves rule!
kiwicar
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 5461
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 5:00 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Post by kiwicar »

surly you need a chevy V8 to drop in the front of that landy? :twisted:
Mike
poppet valves rule!
kev_the_mole
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 1022
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 9:41 pm
Location: Las Islas Purbequias

Post by kev_the_mole »

Mike,

we've got one car in the family that struggles to make 12mpg in urban driving. I can't afford two :lol: :lol: :lol:

Sorry to hear about your nephew though.

I suppose the safest thing is to just plough on but that has its problems too. One of my in-laws was toe-ing his 3-litre Capri down a well known local deer run a few years back and one jumped out in front of him. No time to think even! The windscreen burst, he was temporarily blinded and managed to pull up from 70+ without taking the car off the road. He sat there in shock on an adrenaline high wondering if it was just deer blood or had he p*ssed himself and he started to notice a high pitched keening behind him. Clearing his eyes and turning round expecting to find an injured deer in the back seat he remembered that couldn't be possible as him and a mate had two girls in the back seat they'd been out with that night. As his eyesight cleared and his ears came back on-line the noise became apparent; the two girls were in hysterics and shrieking because one minute they were chatting and the next they were covered in both intestines and the contents of the deer. The deer was never discovered the car was a write off both from frontal damage and it needed a complete new interior. They were all right except for a few minor cuts from the safety glass, a lot of bruising and a smell that stuck with them for the next two weeks. He never saw the girls again! The fickleness of women!
Image


It's an engine Jim.....but not as we know it ;)
kiwicar
Forum Contributor
Forum Contributor
Posts: 5461
Joined: Sat Nov 18, 2006 5:00 pm
Location: Milton Keynes

Post by kiwicar »

can I sugest one of those american V8 diesels that are sold to the rangerover boys, add big wheels and some gearing up (ie lots) and run the thing on bio deisel, loads of links off google including the one below.
http://journeytoforever.org/biodiesel_make.html
depending on the process you use you also get soap as a by-product, I'm not quite sure why but this really appeals to me! :lol:
all the best
Mike
poppet valves rule!
Post Reply

Return to “General Chat Area”