Pictures of my D90

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grasshopper

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Hi all, I finally got my Defender 90 running, after much trial and error, so I thought I may as well post a picture of the finished product. She ain't no looker, with that dog-**** brown paint job, but under the hood where it counts, she's downright illegal. Fitted a stainless steel set of headers and complete exhaust system, which gives a nice V8 growl that announces its presence without being too loud for regular driving.

Fitted her with a 3.9 V8 fed by a Holley Truck Avenger 470 CFM carburettor plumbed to the motor via an Edelbrock intake manifold, but I had to limit the travel of the accelerator pedal because the first time I drove the truck, it broke several valve springs from what seemed like normal, sedate acceleration. The gearbox is a 4-speed manual LT95?, transplanted from an old Rangie that got put to pasture a while back. To reduce that notorious D90 hot floor syndome, I insulated the engine compartment with silver-backed material from Second Skin.com, which reduces that floor heat to the level of being barely noticeable - a great improvement over my Defender 110 pickup truck that literally cooks my feet on even short runs.

That gas pedal limiter obviously lowers the top speed, but nonethless this D90 chirps the front tires when I occasionally floor it to get out of tight spots, startling the odd road hog who expects a D90 to be dead slow off the line.

I plan to install an overdrive into the gearbox at some point, to increase the highway cruising speed a little, but so far I haven't located a source to buy an overdrive for such an old vintage, plus the installation of those overdrives does look rather complicated, judging by an assembly drawing I saw. To try and smooth out the bumps some, I installed dual Bilstein shocks in the front, and replaced stock rubber bushes with blue polybush throughout. I must say that despite that comprehensive suspension upgrade, this D90 rides HARSH, though I may be a bit spoiled since my other car is a quarter-century old W126 Mercedes 500 SEC that glides with eerie smoothness over all but the absolute worst potholes on these Third World roads.
 

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Hi all, I finally got my Defender 90 running, after much trial and error, so I thought I may as well post a picture of the finished product. She ain't no looker, with that dog-**** brown paint job, but under the hood where it counts, she's downright illegal. Fitted a stainless steel set of headers and complete exhaust system, which gives a nice V8 growl that announces its presence without being too loud for regular driving.

Fitted her with a 3.9 V8 fed by a Holley Truck Avenger 470 CFM carburettor plumbed to the motor via an Edelbrock intake manifold, but I had to limit the travel of the accelerator pedal because the first time I drove the truck, it broke several valve springs from what seemed like normal, sedate acceleration. The gearbox is a 4-speed manual LT95?, transplanted from an old Rangie that got put to pasture a while back. To reduce that notorious D90 hot floor syndome, I insulated the engine compartment with silver-backed material from Second Skin.com, which reduces that floor heat to the level of being barely noticeable - a great improvement over my Defender 110 pickup truck that literally cooks my feet on even short runs.

That gas pedal limiter obviously lowers the top speed, but nonethless this D90 chirps the front tires when I occasionally floor it to get out of tight spots, startling the odd road hog who expects a D90 to be dead slow off the line.

I plan to install an overdrive into the gearbox at some point, to increase the highway cruising speed a little, but so far I haven't located a source to buy an overdrive for such an old vintage, plus the installation of those overdrives does look rather complicated, judging by an assembly drawing I saw. To try and smooth out the bumps some, I installed dual Bilstein shocks in the front, and replaced stock rubber bushes with blue polybush throughout. I must say that despite that comprehensive suspension upgrade, this D90 rides HARSH, though I may be a bit spoiled since my other car is a quarter-century old W126 Mercedes 500 SEC that glides with eerie smoothness over all but the absolute worst potholes on these Third World roads.

Looks nice. Wish my 110 had the 'famous hot footwell' syndrome right about now! Might help to melt the ice in between my toes! The 90 rides harder than the 110, and feels especially harsh when you compare it to 'normal' cars. You might want to check that you've not got heavy duty springs installed, as this would make the ride bone shattering...

Loving those W126s, we've had a few 500 and 560 SELs over the years but never an SEC. Fantastic cars... nothing drives quite like a well sorted S-Class :D
 
Thanks for the reply, Langers. I've been watching Sky News about the record snows in the UK, so I agree a hotter Landrover floor would be a good thing there right about now. One thing, I'd rather be driving a Landrover than any other SUV when snow or ice is forecast.

The W126 SEC, with that M117.963 five-liter V8 motor's timing chain, tensioner and guides replaced, and the suspension restored, turned out to be by far the quietest and smoothest handling vehicle I have ever owned. Brisk acceleration, too. I wish I'd discoverd these cars earlier. Being such an old model, Mercedes W126's are mostly sold for their srcap metal value here, so I do get some odd looks for driving such a "relic". If only they knew.
 
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