The Accidental Smallholder Forum
Community => Coffee Lounge => Topic started by: Wizard on January 22, 2010, 06:22:43 pm
-
Hey up Miri has the OH got the Series 2 to start up yet? It's all gone very quiet! :farmer:
-
Would love one but my head say's NO!!!
-
Sandy, your head is wrong don't listen to it.
Wizard, I'm afraids its quiet as nothing much is happening. He's been cleaning the chassis and has now borrowed a jetwash to finish it off. Will it blow half the nuts and bolts away?!!
There does seem to have been a fair few number of Landrover related parcels arriving in the last couple of weeks, but don't know whats been going on!
-
Just spoke to OH. Says he's planning to finish the chassis and then concentrate on the engine.
-
Would it not have been cheaper to buy another one? ;)
-
They're like children - you have to lavish time and love on them and then cherish the results (assuming my OH does a decent job of course!)
-
a car's a car! ;) It goes putt putt and takes you from A to B ;D
-
But thats like saying a dog is a dog! So not true. All cars are just cars and then there's Landrover Series!!!! ;D ;D
-
;)a landrover is not a car bt ant strech of the imagination ::)
-
Would it not have been cheaper to buy another one? ;)
That's missing the point!
I'm presently making arrangements for my older Land Rover (a 1964 SWB) to be rebuilt with a new galvanised chassis. I'm well aware it will cost several times the value of the car, but it means that when my present Landie needs replaced I will have the next one waiting.
The same thing applies to Grey Ferguson tractors - the cost of a rebuild will exceed the market value, but sentiment justifies the cost.
I suspect that every vintage or classic vehicle in existence has had more than it's value spent on it at some time, just to keep it going through the point where it's value was negligible. If nobody did this, there would be no historic vehicles at all. The same is true for good furniture - most antiques that are a couple of hundred years old will have had expensive repairs or restorations done, probably at a time when their relative value was quite low. Certainly my great-grandfather's barometer has had some of it's inlay replaced within my memory, to keep it looking as the maker intended, and my parent's furniture has been recovered as required.
John
-
So does the value of a landy increase with age as antique furniture does? ;D
-
So does the value of a landy increase with age as antique furniture does? ;D
No, but they don't depreciate either. Actually, the early Series 1 Land Rovers (1948 - 1958) have increased in value in recent years, and Series 2 Landrovers (1958 - 1971) have started to creep up too, as they become less common.
Not all antique furniture is valuable - often a favourite piece is restored just because the owner likes it & wants to keep it in nice condition. It's called sustainable living rather than a disposable society?
John
-
I suppose everytthing has value - just not necessarily monetary