Toughest car on sale?

Toughest car on sale?

Author
Discussion

Durruti

1,020 posts

239 months

Sunday 5th December 2021
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Series 79 Landcruiser.

Designed for mining industry and with a design brief of surviving for 25 years in third world conditions with minimal servicing.

Epically tough.

OldGermanHeaps

3,837 posts

179 months

Sunday 5th December 2021
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Is the sherp available in the uk yet? They announced they were going to start importing them.

gravitygravy

98 posts

37 months

Sunday 5th December 2021
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If toughness is the main criteria and money no object, I'd look at importing one of these from Australia. Not cheap though, you're looking at £50k before you get to shipping and import duties.


808 Estate

2,124 posts

92 months

Tuesday 21st December 2021
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mikeh501

719 posts

182 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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New ineos grenadier if you can wait till the summer.

David_M

370 posts

51 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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Desiderata said:
The reason the Landrover (series and defenders) were popular wasn't that they were tough or reliable, it was that when they did break/ rust/ get bumped, everything was replaceable relatively easily and cheaply so that your 1955 series could still be good as new in 2021 or whenever.
Another factor (and this goes way back to 109s and 88s) is that almost everything was interchangeable. So, if you broke something in the middle of Africa you could probably find a local scrapped example and scavenge parts off of it that would do to get it going again.

wyson

2,084 posts

105 months

Wednesday 22nd December 2021
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https://www.roadandtrack.com/new-cars/g19661272/lo...

Not surprised to see the Landcruiser at the top.

I was amazed doing a volcano tour in Bolivia, the Landcruisers had 450000km, about 280000 miles them and looked ancient. Although I don't know how they have been used in the past, it wouldn't surprise me if the majority of those miles were done off road. The tour was 90% off road, some bits were quite gnarly.

Edited by wyson on Wednesday 22 December 13:18

Cogcog

11,800 posts

236 months

Thursday 6th January 2022
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Trevor555 said:
OP did you get something in the end?

I asked a dealer exactly this once, he said G wagon if the budget allows.
Last time I was at the rocket site and MOF surplus they had some low miles Danish army G wagons in:

https://www.modsurplus.com/index.php/search-by-des...

Spare tyre

9,586 posts

131 months

Tuesday 11th January 2022
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My mk1 Jimmy’s have been incredibly tough

Mercdriver

2,016 posts

34 months

Tuesday 11th January 2022
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G wagen, good for pulling tractors out of ditches when they get stuck, I admit I am biased I had one, superbe bit of kit

RustyRazor

1 posts

26 months

Thursday 17th August 2023
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Subaru Outback

ChocolateFrog

25,439 posts

174 months

Thursday 17th August 2023
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It'll have a Toyota badge on that's for sure.

Toyota don't bring their best stuff to our shores but they'd still win hands down.

generationx

6,762 posts

106 months

Thursday 17th August 2023
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RustyRazor said:
Subaru Outback
Lurk-tastic!

Mondrian

52 posts

120 months

Saturday 11th November 2023
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If you are looking for rugged and reliable car then it has to be old school with minimal electronics as they don't like to be bashed about.

70 series Landcruisers are definitely the most rugged but they aren't available for sale in UK and seem to have a long waiting list where they are available for sale (Australia, Middle East) so demand a high premium if you really wanted one.

Hilux is the next best thing and offers much better road and offroad manners, it also has a lower CofG so if you are likely to tilt it to the side in an offroad situation, a safer set of wheels. Personally I prefer the pre 2016 models (Vigo, 7th gen) as those have less electronics. Seems to be the vehicle of choice for warlords in remote regions of the world.

Landcruiser 150 (Prado) are pretty good too and offer more creature comfort however they are heavier and more complex than hilux (with same engine) so expect more wear & tear of parts and not as reliable.

Overall Toyotas are very reliable. On my last trip to Middle East on one of my taxi rides I ended up in a 10 year old Rav4 taxi that had 700,000 miles, he said he never had any major issues.

nismocat

386 posts

9 months

Tuesday 20th February
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gravitygravy said:
If toughness is the main criteria and money no object, I'd look at importing one of these from Australia. Not cheap though, you're looking at £50k before you get to shipping and import duties.

Why Australia?
Don't they have them in Japan/UAE/China?

Super Sonic

4,867 posts

55 months

Tuesday 20th February
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808 Estate said:
Stalwart?

MustangGT

11,640 posts

281 months

Tuesday 20th February
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Super Sonic said:
Stalwart?
Stalwart was a 6x6 truck: