June 3, 2011

About the new heading photo

A reader has asked about the Suzuki shown in the new heading; was it, he wondered, the one that Colin Burden used to own, and where was the photo taken? Well spotted, it is indeed that very vehicle, which was owned and modified by Suzuki enthusiast Burden who these days runs the Trackwise 4WD training organisation. The 2000-model Jimny was a real tiger and Colin knew how to drive it well. He sold the Suzuki some years ago; records show it's still registered but hasn't had a WoF since 2009. The picture was taken on a rough forest block on the Awhitu Peninsula, southwest of Auckland.

June 2, 2011

what the Molesworth dogs thought

Toyota's FJ Cruiser Top to Bottom adventure has ended in Bluff with a feed of four dozen oysters brought along by the mayor. The trip, which began at North Cape, covered almost 5000km, mostly on back roads.  
According to Toyota, "the FJ Cruiser survived pretty much unscathed, apart from a healthy caking of mud, a cracked windscreen, one blown tyre, and a bit of dog pee when the farm dogs from Molesworth Station got a bit over-excited as they checked out the inside of the Cruiser."

The company sees the trip as a marketing triumph: "We've had close to 100,000 views on YouTube, nearly 9000 Facebook and Twitter fans, and the website has exceeded nearly 600,000 page views. It has been great to see so many loyal Toyota customers and Kiwi legends following the journey and engaging with us the whole way."

A bunch of earlier FJ Cruiser postings are here.

May 31, 2011

Slide and glide

Brand new Rancho front diff slider and the same company's sump shield (foreground). Wonder how long the shiny new look will last?
Nth Degree rear slider, a quality piece of gear.
Back to Motortech 4x4 today to have some stuff bolted on. Both items were promoted as being so simple to fit that any fool could do it, but I'd have skinned my knuckles and had heavy metal falling on my head if I'd tried to do the job at home without a hoist. After damaging the Jeep's paper-thin oil sump last year and stopping a rerun by fitting an American Rancho RockGear shield, I've been worried about the diff housings which some have found to be less than robust. So with the exchange rate being what it is, I went back to American sources to seek peace of mind.

I chose the Rancho front differential glide plate that protects the casing from direct contact in severe off-road use, at the cost of a few millimetres of clearance. The sump shield mentioned above slid into position with aerospace-industry precision, but the slider was nowhere near as exact and needed a little assistance from a well-aimed hammer.

For the back, I went to the well-regarded AEV company for its Nth Degreee under-axle skid plate that deflects potential hits from the diff and protects the rear driveshaft, CV joint and flange. It sacrifices no ground clearance. Built primarily from 1/4-inch steel it fit perfectly; a quality piece of gear.