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I would second the suggestion of trying it as-is. A standard Disco on the right tyres will handle most lanes, certainly enough to get some experience and there's something to be said for learning to drive what you have properly before modifying it...
I find the standard v8 to be water proof enough for ocasional wading. Mine is vitually standard and has kept going even when the water was riding up over the bonnet, I was more concerend about hydraulicing it at the time though as not only did I not have a snorcel, but the standard air filter box (which puts the air intake in a relativerly water proof void) was replace with a rather exposed and now muddy KN filter [-o<you were very very lucky,my mates v8 dies if you wave a damp rag at it
Quote from: clbarclay on February 09, 2008, 19:58:26I find the standard v8 to be water proof enough for ocasional wading. Mine is vitually standard and has kept going even when the water was riding up over the bonnet, I was more concerend about hydraulicing it at the time though as not only did I not have a snorcel, but the standard air filter box (which puts the air intake in a relativerly water proof void) was replace with a rather exposed and now muddy KN filter [-o<you were very very lucky,my mates v8 dies if you wave a damp rag at itYou'll probably find it's about time his ignition system needs an overhaul then! :lol: New quality leads on mine with a touch of chain wax at either end, and it's been fine through most things. I did add some plastic bottle protection for dizzy coil prior to last years biling bash... but TBH I think it would have been fine anyway.Skibum
Laning? then does it need lifting at all?Tyres, with the V8 you need to be careful with remould as most of them are not speed rated sufficiently for the V8, you'll also find that bigger MTs are not either, my 235/85 BFGs aren't for example.Are you going to use it as a daily driver? are you going to get the bug and want to drive more and more off-road?If you want a lift then budget to spend around £800 on the car to get it propely sorted, springs and shocks are only half the story, brake lines, bump stops, casotr correction, cranked arms and a prop will eat the rest.THEN you need tyres to suite you rlift, these will not fit on a standard car if you intend to take advantage of the lift and go bigger.I'd suggest you start with a set of 235/70 MT or AT and se how you get on before you blow loads of cash on stuff you might never need. See if you can pick up some second hand tyres to get you started, then join your local group and get out there and get dirty :D
I run a 1995 3 door v8 discovery. Im still running the standard height suspension with 235/85/16 tyres on landrover alloys. I have got a h/d rear bumper, front steering guard, rear tank guard, snorkel and a side exit exhaust. I have found that it is VERY good off road without lifted suspension and the only thing that really let it down was the lack of travel.If i was you i would go for the biggest tyres you could fit under the arches and get some protection and some recovery points and save your cash for the next 6 months. Come march i should be fitting the llama4x4 suspension kit on mine but then i would have had it a year :dance:Gavin.P.s in some previous posts there shgould be some photos of my discovery with that size tyres on.