Willem Moseley 2012, actually bought it new, because there wasn't much on the second hand market and they seemed to hold their value really well, so it wasn't much of a leap to the showroom floor. I guess it is not exactly stock, my "modifications" included 215 75 r15 BFG mud terrains (wow!) and I've pulled some interior bits out and am in the process of building a centre console that makes proper use of every little bit of space. The lack of design thought put into utilising the limited storage space is woeful. I originally put a basket on the roof racks, until I realised that combination alone used up the 25kg load rating for the rails, ha ha. Luckily, I'm into ultralight hiking type gear, so it's all a good, somewhat challenging, exercise in building a lightweight equipment system. Good practice for any aspiring helicopter crewmen out there.
also. love that u guys are independent. this is the future of media. im ova the likes of product flogging 4wd shows who bullshit. like the honest approach
Every overlander should do some backpacking. Everything i need for a month long trip, less food and water and vehicle related items, weighs under 7 kilograms. That includes tent, sleeping bag, sleeping pad, tarp, personal items, clothing, med kit, survival kit, mess kit, knife, flashlight, hammock, chair, water filtration, and a foldable bucket for washing clothes, bathing, putting out fires etc. Overlanders take way too much "stuff".
This is so very cool, my two favourite 4x4 experts in the one place.May this collaboration last for ever and be as strong and informative as Paul Marsh and Andrew have done for years.Cheers Eric. 200LC
Wow, two of my favourite off road youtube channel collaboration. All top notch points mentioned in the video, Andrew is extremely knowledgeable. Good on you Rohhny for the making the callab video.
I could not agree more with your advice. Spot on comment re 200 too. Ive always had 70series, got a nice fj45 collector too. Bought a 200 cause of the grandkids. Lovely car. Awesome black top/dirt road tourer until i put myself/wife and camping gear in it. Suspension was overwhelmed. I travel light too! When i looked at gvm and added up bull bar, 2 people, tent, fridge, small shovel, clothes, water, spares (no extra spare wheel no highlift jack), i was still “over”. Owned it for 3 years and couldnt bring myself to spend $10-20,000 on upgrades. Sold it 4 weeks ago back into a 79 dual cab. Could not be happier :)).
A truly rare beast. A Overland video full of down to earth, realistic advice. You are building a really good channel Ronnie. Keep up the good work. You have earned a genuine fan. Thank You.
Great to see you chaps together at last. Good point on the electrics. Most auto electricians just connect things. They don't "install" anything properly. Electrical installation on overlander and extreme use vehicles is a far different thing to fitting a boom box in a street car. Another thing worth mentioning is that an inexperienced person is more likely to create a bad solder joint than a bad crimp joint assuming they are actually using crimping pliers of course. Although soldering is good practice in most electrical applications, it is not actually best in automotive applications especially in high stress and vibration environments. You will rarely find a solder joint unless it's on a PCB.
I totally agree with the your take on DIY. It might not look as good, but it might work better. That’s part of design as well…deciding how good you want it to look and how much you want to pay for it
Great video Ronny. Glad you pointed out the no touching brakes unless you are properly trained to do so. I have 4 years tech schooling to work on, repair, and modify vehicles. As a person who loves to do electrical work, I am a firm believer in soldering electrical connections and sealing them with heat shrink tubing. Also anytime a wire or hose has to go through a hole in a panel or frame member use grommets and sheathing to prevent any chafing.
brakes are pretty simple I don't think that's much of a hurdle, the electrical I agree completely! I am absolutely a culperate of poor wiring and guiltier then most, wiring has never been something I grasp too many thing to think of in my head at once witch ever my mind works so I generally do it once then try to fix streamline and do it better, and hopefully one day finish it completely to correct! but at least I avoid twist on wire caps and I braild any wires propper before not soldering them like I should lol
Exactly. Calipers, rotors and pads are simple devices and not dangerous to work on if you have experience just like any other system. Wiring is far more likely cause a dangerous situation and yet they are both all for doing our own wiring.
+MrLangDog I can understand some of their liability concerns as public figures, and a failed braking system being quite an issue, wiring wolnt cause a wreck but may leave you stranded, inverse of a brake situation and they are heavy on multiple vehicles so to am extent I can understand their recommendations. albeit I'll happily amend their suggestions to tailer them to my own use, in low range brakes never seem enough, and there always to many wires haha.
David Genthner Jr Almost million miles of driving - I've always done my own brakes, never had a failure... Friends and colleagues ranging from ford to Mercedes have all had disastrous brake failure when done by a trained "specialist". No thanks to the experts, I'll keep doing my own using better quality products, better job and the absolute satisfaction it's done correctly, torqued and greased rather than rammed up and overtightened with impact tools!
On soldering wires: there's a very good argument (and for certain applications it's a requirement) that wires shouldn't be soldered and that they should be crimped instead. The reason is that the solder will create a rigid area of the wire that will then be prone to fail when subjected to the vibrations that you find in in vehicles. Crimping done properly will give an excellent electrical connection without the negative effects that soldering has.
excellent video Ronny and to true about learning to repair /service your own vehicle I saved a fortune repairing my front cv shafts on my 80 series cruiser also have done all my own wiring for winch lights and radio to date next i am building my own rear bar with swingout arms on both sides with all lighting also building my own rood racks ...personally I have been doing my own breaks for as long as I have been driving the trick to brakes is ensuring your seals are in good condition and knowing the correct way to bleed the brakes ;) never had an issue with fail or fading even on steep or extended declines .. not mechanically trained but I been tinkering on cars since I was 10 1/2 working on brakes was the first thing i was taught by my best mates brother on an old ap5 valiant ....great video guys now i best go get a fire extinguisher and first aid kit ....
good show once again ronny and Andrew,in regards to you chat about draws I think one way to get what you want and need is make up a cutting list for your panel sizes and work out what draw runners you will use and take your cutting list to a local cabinet maker for him to cut everything to size.This makes all the cuts nice and neat,make sure you glue and screw you panels together.Its not expensive to do.
I JUST found your site here on UA-cam and am totally stoked. I have watched five of your videos so far and I am so very thankful that I have found your site. I have been four-wheeling off and on my whole life (I'm 73 years young now) and you're information is spot on, hands down!!! I live in the U S (Kingman Arizona) to be specific but your information is so very usable that no one can deny it. Too bad that you are in Australia. I'd sure like to meet and know you! You are very knowlegable and I thank you for posting these videos. Keep them coming!
Out of every friggin' metal music crammed offroad or gear review video i've seen now THIS has been the most educational. I'm saving this to re-listen. GREAT discussion. No I'm going to go buy me a nice shovel, max trax and some nice straps! Thanks guys
I loved seeing this collaboration Vid. My father was a professional Boy Scout and am looking forward to putting my lifelong camping experiences with the Overland community. I am just getting started with a vehicle and have watched and subscribed to both of your channels a few months back. this was a grand suprise and will certainly be a money saver for me. Thanks to you Ronnie and Andrew for sharing your extended experience. looking forward to the wilderness!
THANK RONNY AND ANDREW FOR PUT TOGETHER GREAT DETAIL VIDEO AS BOTH KNOW WHAT TOURING IN OUTBACK AUSTRALIA BUSH AND KNOW WHAT SHOULd BE CARRY IN OUR 4X4 AS STAND TO TOUR IN BUSH
I enjoyed this guys, thank you. I think one good bit of advice is that at the bare minimum people should not consider serious off roading unless they know first aid, recovery basics and at least have some basic mechanical and electrical skills. I have lost count of the number of people I've helped get off a simple beach sand recovery by just letting some air out of their tyres..........this is possibly the most basic thing any 4WD owner should know and so many don't even know this. I think people should be encouraged to do as much DIY stuff as possible on their own vehicle because there is no better way to get to know your vehicle personally and therefore be able to identify changes before they become breakages or failures of some kind. There are so many resources out there, UA-cam for example, where there are a multitude of knowledgeable and reputable operators who run tutorials on pretty much anything, this and your parts suppliers and maintenance manuals being available for almost everything these days, get your hands dirty, everyone has one mate who has a mate who's a mechanic, I'm sure that for the right number of beers they'll help you learn stuff ;)
I really like your comments regarding chips. I would also add that the real point of chipping and tuning is to make it exactly right for you. Andrews comment about the t-shirt is spot on. When you choose to tune your engine the most important part is to make it work exactly right for what you are doing. Even to the point of tuning to more power at lower RPM because your driving style is at the bottom of the range. Make the wrench tune it for you not for him or his impressions.
so awesome seeing the two of you making vids together i have been watching and learning from both your channels for some time now and am really excited to see what you guys come up with for collaborations
Regarding lighting, I like to carry a headlamp (that’s used 99% of the time) a decent but not huge led torch (LED Lenser P7 or similar) and a work lamp for under the bonnet/vehicle work.
Great advice guys, yes and I carry a mid-size fiskars axe, very useful tool. Don't go out if you don't train first, do some practice . I have seen people that were kitted well enough but did not know what to do. First aid, tyre changing, the list goes on. Practice, become competent then you can have fun and not cause trouble for the rest of us. Search and rescue is not my idea of fun, I do it but do not enjoy it! Looking forward to the Canning video, Thank you
This is an awesome video Ronny. Really enjoy all your stuff. Im young and don't know alot about overlanding and 4 wheel driving but very interested and just purchased a project vehicle. These are very helpful for me. Keep up the good work.
I have just been getting into overlanding. Thank you for the videos you have made. They are really helpfull for questions I had and questions I haven't known I needed to have.
Well done guys, one of the best videos I have seen for a long time. Down to earth and real, and definitely not sponsored by one of those large companies. Loved the talk about electronics, being a electronics tech, I have seen some shockers, do all my own now. Thanks again for a great video.
A magnetic torch where you can do any work anywhere on the car with two hands and have light. I use it more than anything in my entire "stuff" kit for overlanding. Also what don't touch brakes? always do my own pads, never an issue.
Great video Ronny your collaboration with Andrew was fantastic to see, I also follow Andrew on his channel & I think these types of joint videos will really go the distance. The wealth of knowledge you both have is enormous & you complimented each other very well when discussing each topic, really great to watch & you covered a good deal of subjects which gave some great advice for someone just about to do a build as well as sound tips for existing Overlanders. I really hope you both will continue to do these types of collaboration videos. Thank's Mate, Steve.
Hey Ronny, hey Andrew. I love this video and i hope we can see many more. You are no competitors, you are doing similar things but in a totaly different way and that is so interesting for us. I think most of your followers are the same. I hope to see many more of this conversation of 2 generations talking about their love to the details.
I've just got myself a '01 Lux. (I'm 17 btw). This was really helpful, seeing as places like ARB will always just try and sell you stuff. Towing my 4.5 tinnie around the place, it's definitely important to consider weight and such.
when setting up for camping my family would set up camp in the front yard just like you would in the wild then start packing it up from that spot. it help put thing away in a way that helps set up
Good video! I agree with most things in the video. I do think if you are mechanically inclined and do good work, you should have no issue working on your brakes. I also think that air compressors should have been included in essentials section. Mine made all the difference after I installed it.
Wow awesome video great to see you both together. I have watched a lot of Andrew's videos and liked seeing the build on his Cruiser by Alu Cab. I love seeing UA-camrs work together to make cross over videos. Thank you to both of you.
as a professional dealership mechanic, I'd have a look over the stock harness because, though most connections are soldered, not many of them are weather proofed for the purpose of fording streams and such. Also, one thing i haven't heard mentioned is extending breathers for axles and the transmission and transfer case. failing to bring the breathers above he waterline could result in rapid transmission or diff failure due to water contamination
A Kukri knife works well for chopping wood/trees etc. Haven't used it for pegs though. I use a Kukri as my "survival" knife when hiking as it is the most versatile. It is great for cutting supplejacks, which are ideal for building a shelter in NZ bush country for example. Oh and the Murhpy's law remark, it is used incorrectly (yes I have done it heaps of times as well until I found out what Murphy's law really is : If a part can be installed in two ways, the correct and the incorrect way, there will always be someone who will install it incorrectly.), sorry couldn't help myself mentioning it :). I did the wiring in my GMC Van (not off road) years ago and hated the horrible wiring that it came with from the factory. So when I put the utility batteries in (it was a camper van) I soldered everything. I designed my own fuse box and distribution strips etc. It was rock solid and all the internal stuff was even heat shrinked. That van is no longer mine but it will not have a single issue for decades I'm sure :)
Love your vids, Ronny! So much good knowledge and honest advice here! I'm a fledgling overlander here in the U.S. and hope to experience overlanding in South America and Australia one day, as well. Your vids have been indispensable in helping me equip myself sensibly and use my equipment correctly. Thanks; and keep up the great work!
Brakes are always the most overlooked upgrade in the truck/ute and suv/wagon market. As your vehicle gets loaded up, the factory brakes are going to more likely to overheat, possibly even lock up.
Great video Ronny, I have enjoyed your Videos and trips and Tips. I have watched many of Andrew's videos. I find that you both produce excellent videos and enjoy seeing the outback, and Andrew's trips around Southern Africa. Looking forward to seeing more videos from both of you and hopefully trips you do together.
Now this is how a video presenting knowledge should be done; open discussion about what's useful and what's useless vs BUY BUY BUY, SELL SELL SELL! Thank you
If it wasn't for u an your channel my build was going a hole different way then I started watching your channel an my xj is going overland now thanks for your videos an sharing your knowledge.
BRILLIANT. I am a long time subscriber to both your channels. Welcome to WA Andrew, and we did the canning last year so enjoy. When you mentioned recovery gear and how to use it you should also mention some of the training organizations around.. like "Ultimate 4wd training". Invaluable to avoid the inserted picture of the towball in the rear door.
Andrew is basicly one of the founding father of modern overlanding. He is a legend! Love the guy.
ROOTHY is the Godfather
I've learnt so much from these two legends and I don't even own my first 4x4 yet.
Have you bought one yet ?
I just subscribed because they are not social distancing and they aren't wearing tampons.
Same😂
I go over the GVM for my stock Suzuki Jimny when I go through the drive through and order anything larger than a small cheeseburger meal.
no that feeling haha. What year is yours?
Willem Moseley 2012, actually bought it new, because there wasn't much on the second hand market and they seemed to hold their value really well, so it wasn't much of a leap to the showroom floor. I guess it is not exactly stock, my "modifications" included 215 75 r15 BFG mud terrains (wow!) and I've pulled some interior bits out and am in the process of building a centre console that makes proper use of every little bit of space. The lack of design thought put into utilising the limited storage space is woeful.
I originally put a basket on the roof racks, until I realised that combination alone used up the 25kg load rating for the rails, ha ha. Luckily, I'm into ultralight hiking type gear, so it's all a good, somewhat challenging, exercise in building a lightweight equipment system. Good practice for any aspiring helicopter crewmen out there.
I've got a 2dr JK that's not much better...
Kit Bloke hhjb
EDnaut Simultaneously being into ultra-light hiking gear and vehicle based travel seems like you have a long way to meet in the middle haha
My 2 fav channels come together. I was so happy to see you come to Australia Andrew
also. love that u guys are independent. this is the future of media. im ova the likes of product flogging 4wd shows who bullshit. like the honest approach
massive troopy I agree wholeheartedly
Cough cough 4WD247
The best conversation I've ever heard on real world 4x4 set up, no product pushing, just the physical reality of equipment.
Every overlander should do some backpacking. Everything i need for a month long trip, less food and water and vehicle related items, weighs under 7 kilograms. That includes tent, sleeping bag, sleeping pad, tarp, personal items, clothing, med kit, survival kit, mess kit, knife, flashlight, hammock, chair, water filtration, and a foldable bucket for washing clothes, bathing, putting out fires etc. Overlanders take way too much "stuff".
Masters of overlanding came together. My all time favorites!
My two favorite off road channels in one place.
Brian's filing cabinet is brilliant! It works so well.
So good to see you blokes together. Great rundown on builds too.
+Harry Fisher yeah the custom draw system is something else 🤣
The two people that started me on this journey in the same damn place! Awesome.
This is so very cool, my two favourite 4x4 experts in the one place.May this collaboration last for ever and be as strong and informative as Paul Marsh and Andrew have done for years.Cheers Eric. 200LC
My two favorite overland content creators. Great video with lots of priceless knowledge.
Wow, two of my favourite off road youtube channel collaboration. All top notch points mentioned in the video, Andrew is extremely knowledgeable. Good on you Rohhny for the making the callab video.
a worthwhile discussion ... in relaxed, comfortable-looking surroundings. Thanks ...
I could not agree more with your advice. Spot on comment re 200 too. Ive always had 70series, got a nice fj45 collector too. Bought a 200 cause of the grandkids. Lovely car. Awesome black top/dirt road tourer until i put myself/wife and camping gear in it. Suspension was overwhelmed. I travel light too! When i looked at gvm and added up bull bar, 2 people, tent, fridge, small shovel, clothes, water, spares (no extra spare wheel no highlift jack), i was still “over”. Owned it for 3 years and couldnt bring myself to spend $10-20,000 on upgrades. Sold it 4 weeks ago back into a 79 dual cab. Could not be happier :)).
Two intelligent good blokes , very easy to listen to. Cheers boys
The collaboration of two Icons in Overlanding and Offroad camping... Bravo!!
Great information and advice as usual on both men's behalf...
A truly rare beast.
A Overland video full of down to earth, realistic advice. You are building a really good channel Ronnie. Keep up the good work. You have earned a genuine fan.
Thank You.
2 great overlanders! respect n glad to see them link up!
Andrew and Ronny, what a team can't be beaten keep up the good work
Great to see you chaps together at last. Good point on the electrics. Most auto electricians just connect things. They don't "install" anything properly. Electrical installation on overlander and extreme use vehicles is a far different thing to fitting a boom box in a street car. Another thing worth mentioning is that an inexperienced person is more likely to create a bad solder joint than a bad crimp joint assuming they are actually using crimping pliers of course. Although soldering is good practice in most electrical applications, it is not actually best in automotive applications especially in high stress and vibration environments. You will rarely find a solder joint unless it's on a PCB.
I totally agree with the your take on DIY. It might not look as good, but it might work better. That’s part of design as well…deciding how good you want it to look and how much you want to pay for it
This was a great collaboration, I hope we see something like this again from these two.
awesome guys, so happy to see you both together. you're the two guys that are mainly inspiring me for my overland tours ..
Great video Ronny. Glad you pointed out the no touching brakes unless you are properly trained to do so. I have 4 years tech schooling to work on, repair, and modify vehicles. As a person who loves to do electrical work, I am a firm believer in soldering electrical connections and sealing them with heat shrink tubing. Also anytime a wire or hose has to go through a hole in a panel or frame member use grommets and sheathing to prevent any chafing.
David Genthner Jr brakes are not that difficult now bleeding master cylinders though, what a bitch
brakes are pretty simple I don't think that's much of a hurdle, the electrical I agree completely! I am absolutely a culperate of poor wiring and guiltier then most, wiring has never been something I grasp too many thing to think of in my head at once witch ever my mind works so I generally do it once then try to fix streamline and do it better, and hopefully one day finish it completely to correct! but at least I avoid twist on wire caps and I braild any wires propper before not soldering them like I should lol
Exactly. Calipers, rotors and pads are simple devices and not dangerous to work on if you have experience just like any other system. Wiring is far more likely cause a dangerous situation and yet they are both all for doing our own wiring.
+MrLangDog I can understand some of their liability concerns as public figures, and a failed braking system being quite an issue, wiring wolnt cause a wreck but may leave you stranded, inverse of a brake situation and they are heavy on multiple vehicles so to am extent I can understand their recommendations. albeit I'll happily amend their suggestions to tailer them to my own use, in low range brakes never seem enough, and there always to many wires haha.
David Genthner Jr Almost million miles of driving - I've always done my own brakes, never had a failure...
Friends and colleagues ranging from ford to Mercedes have all had disastrous brake failure when done by a trained "specialist".
No thanks to the experts, I'll keep doing my own using better quality products, better job and the absolute satisfaction it's done correctly, torqued and greased rather than rammed up and overtightened with impact tools!
this duo is going to be epic. cant wait for more
On soldering wires: there's a very good argument (and for certain applications it's a requirement) that wires shouldn't be soldered and that they should be crimped instead. The reason is that the solder will create a rigid area of the wire that will then be prone to fail when subjected to the vibrations that you find in in vehicles. Crimping done properly will give an excellent electrical connection without the negative effects that soldering has.
redarc recomend cripming with a small amount of solder just to seal the joint but avoid making a rigid area
One Of The Best videos I’ve seen. Thank you Guys. Must say I’ve been learning a lot with your content Ronny. Greetings from Portugal. Cheers
excellent video Ronny and to true about learning to repair /service your own vehicle I saved a fortune repairing my front cv shafts on my 80 series cruiser also have done all my own wiring for winch lights and radio to date next i am building my own rear bar with swingout arms on both sides with all lighting also building my own rood racks ...personally I have been doing my own breaks for as long as I have been driving the trick to brakes is ensuring your seals are in good condition and knowing the correct way to bleed the brakes ;) never had an issue with fail or fading even on steep or extended declines .. not mechanically trained but I been tinkering on cars since I was 10 1/2 working on brakes was the first thing i was taught by my best mates brother on an old ap5 valiant ....great video guys now i best go get a fire extinguisher and first aid kit ....
good show once again ronny and Andrew,in regards to you chat about draws I think one way to get what you want and need is make up a cutting list for your panel sizes and work out what draw runners you will use and take your cutting list to a local cabinet maker for him to cut everything to size.This makes all the cuts nice and neat,make sure you glue and screw you panels together.Its not expensive to do.
I JUST found your site here on UA-cam and am totally stoked. I have watched five of your videos so far and I am so very thankful that I have found your site. I have been four-wheeling off and on my whole life (I'm 73 years young now) and you're information is spot on, hands down!!! I live in the U S (Kingman Arizona) to be specific but your information is so very usable that no one can deny it. Too bad that you are in Australia. I'd sure like to meet and know you! You are very knowlegable and I thank you for posting these videos. Keep them coming!
Thanks mate glad you are finding the channel useful
Out of every friggin' metal music crammed offroad or gear review video i've seen now THIS has been the most educational. I'm saving this to re-listen. GREAT discussion. No I'm going to go buy me a nice shovel, max trax and some nice straps! Thanks guys
Loving the collaboration with my two favourite channels, thanks guys
I loved seeing this collaboration Vid. My father was a professional Boy Scout and am looking forward to putting my lifelong camping experiences with the Overland community. I am just getting started with a vehicle and have watched and subscribed to both of your channels a few months back. this was a grand suprise and
will certainly be a money saver for me. Thanks to you Ronnie and Andrew for sharing your extended experience. looking forward to the wilderness!
Fantastic---- I have learned most from Mr. White --- thank you for making a video with him
I agree so much with this guy's point at 14:20.
On my 1992 Land Cruiser HJZ75RV the front and rear wheel bearings are the same so I carry a universal kit with tab washers and seals for both axles.
2 fav youtubers together. watched it twice now. great work and handy tips
THANK RONNY AND ANDREW FOR PUT TOGETHER GREAT DETAIL VIDEO AS BOTH KNOW WHAT TOURING IN OUTBACK AUSTRALIA BUSH AND KNOW WHAT SHOULd BE CARRY IN OUR 4X4 AS STAND TO TOUR IN BUSH
Love that you guys teamed up!!!
DREAMS REALLY DO COME TRUE!!! So glad to see a colab video with the BEST overlanders!
I enjoyed this guys, thank you. I think one good bit of advice is that at the bare minimum people should not consider serious off roading unless they know first aid, recovery basics and at least have some basic mechanical and electrical skills. I have lost count of the number of people I've helped get off a simple beach sand recovery by just letting some air out of their tyres..........this is possibly the most basic thing any 4WD owner should know and so many don't even know this. I think people should be encouraged to do as much DIY stuff as possible on their own vehicle because there is no better way to get to know your vehicle personally and therefore be able to identify changes before they become breakages or failures of some kind. There are so many resources out there, UA-cam for example, where there are a multitude of knowledgeable and reputable operators who run tutorials on pretty much anything, this and your parts suppliers and maintenance manuals being available for almost everything these days, get your hands dirty, everyone has one mate who has a mate who's a mechanic, I'm sure that for the right number of beers they'll help you learn stuff ;)
I really like your comments regarding chips. I would also add that the real point of chipping and tuning is to make it exactly right for you. Andrews comment about the t-shirt is spot on. When you choose to tune your engine the most important part is to make it work exactly right for what you are doing. Even to the point of tuning to more power at lower RPM because your driving style is at the bottom of the range. Make the wrench tune it for you not for him or his impressions.
The collab I've been waiting for! Awesome!
Wow my two favorite 4x4 people on the same channel, looking forward to an adventure with the two of you!
Best episode ever, Like when you discuss lite a blogg talk with argumenting with each other. More of that! Thanks for charing, Cheers
so awesome seeing the two of you making vids together i have been watching and learning from both your channels for some time now and am really excited to see what you guys come up with for collaborations
Regarding lighting, I like to carry a headlamp (that’s used 99% of the time) a decent but not huge led torch (LED Lenser P7 or similar) and a work lamp for under the bonnet/vehicle work.
Great advice guys, yes and I carry a mid-size fiskars axe, very useful tool. Don't go out if you don't train first, do some practice . I have seen people that were kitted well enough but did not know what to do. First aid, tyre changing, the list goes on. Practice, become competent then you can have fun and not cause trouble for the rest of us. Search and rescue is not my idea of fun, I do it but do not enjoy it!
Looking forward to the Canning video, Thank you
Andrew is king of building overland cars !
You two guys were clearly enjoying yourselves.
Rodney you have some great video and this one was one of your best . It was honest and very informative. Thank you
The Lords of the Cruisers! They finally found each other. We expect a lot of info from you guys. Like this vid. Well done.
Andrew seems like a great guy, as well as Ronny. Great video
This is an awesome video Ronny. Really enjoy all your stuff. Im young and don't know alot about overlanding and 4 wheel driving but very interested and just purchased a project vehicle. These are very helpful for me. Keep up the good work.
I have just been getting into overlanding. Thank you for the videos you have made. They are really helpfull for questions I had and questions I haven't known I needed to have.
2 Legends working together. Both of my favourite UA-cam channels in one! I hope these collabs keep happening fellas!
Thank you for sharing your wisdom xxxx I’ve got a 96 Defender, I love 💓 her x
This the collaboration I have been waiting for
This is the bloke that we need listen to. You don't need so many add ons....just be smart with what you're doing.
Well done guys, one of the best videos I have seen for a long time. Down to earth and real, and definitely not sponsored by one of those large companies. Loved the talk about electronics, being a electronics tech, I have seen some shockers, do all my own now. Thanks again for a great video.
awesome that the two of you are getting together.
A magnetic torch where you can do any work anywhere on the car with two hands and have light. I use it more than anything in my entire "stuff" kit for overlanding.
Also what don't touch brakes? always do my own pads, never an issue.
I use all marine grade witing. The wires are tined so it resists corrosion really well compared to bare copper.
Mind blown. They are two of my favorite off-road / overland channels! Cool collaboration!
Dream Team!
Once again what an awesome video. Very informative. Its given me some ideas for my future build. Great video Ronny.
Great to see you two doing video together. I really enjoyed it. Thanks :-)
Thanks from the states
just getting started in the over landing . Great info and insight. You guys are true gentlemen f the hobby
this is my favorite 4wd channel ..fmower from Algeria.
Wow both of you together is an awesome video. Thankyou for making this happen!
Great video Ronny your collaboration with Andrew was fantastic to see, I also follow Andrew on his channel & I think these types of joint videos will really go the distance. The wealth of knowledge you both have is enormous & you complimented each other very well when discussing each topic, really great to watch & you covered a good deal of subjects which gave some great advice for someone just about to do a build as well as sound tips for existing Overlanders. I really hope you both will continue to do these types of collaboration videos. Thank's Mate, Steve.
Two great channels come together - love it
Hey my two favorite UA-cam off-road people! WOOT WOOO!
Hey Ronny, hey Andrew. I love this video and i hope we can see many more.
You are no competitors, you are doing similar things but in a totaly different way and that is so interesting for us. I think most of your followers are the same. I hope to see many more of this conversation of 2 generations talking about their love to the details.
Exactly right sir.
You summed it up well Michael
I've just got myself a '01 Lux. (I'm 17 btw). This was really helpful, seeing as places like ARB will always just try and sell you stuff. Towing my 4.5 tinnie around the place, it's definitely important to consider weight and such.
Wow this was an awesome video Watching you talking to a legend! Brilliant Ronnie, we all can learn so much from Andrew
when setting up for camping my family would set up camp in the front yard just like you would in the wild then start packing it up from that spot. it help put thing away in a way that helps set up
Hey this is really neat two very different styles, but experts coming together to make a very good video. Thanks
thank very much. a whole lot of useful info from the two of you.
Good video! I agree with most things in the video. I do think if you are mechanically inclined and do good work, you should have no issue working on your brakes. I also think that air compressors should have been included in essentials section. Mine made all the difference after I installed it.
Wow awesome video great to see you both together. I have watched a lot of Andrew's videos and liked seeing the build on his Cruiser by Alu Cab. I love seeing UA-camrs work together to make cross over videos. Thank you to both of you.
as a professional dealership mechanic, I'd have a look over the stock harness because, though most connections are soldered, not many of them are weather proofed for the purpose of fording streams and such. Also, one thing i haven't heard mentioned is extending breathers for axles and the transmission and transfer case. failing to bring the breathers above he waterline could result in rapid transmission or diff failure due to water contamination
A Kukri knife works well for chopping wood/trees etc. Haven't used it for pegs though. I use a Kukri as my "survival" knife when hiking as it is the most versatile. It is great for cutting supplejacks, which are ideal for building a shelter in NZ bush country for example.
Oh and the Murhpy's law remark, it is used incorrectly (yes I have done it heaps of times as well until I found out what Murphy's law really is : If a part can be installed in two ways, the correct and the incorrect way, there will always be someone who will install it incorrectly.), sorry couldn't help myself mentioning it :).
I did the wiring in my GMC Van (not off road) years ago and hated the horrible wiring that it came with from the factory. So when I put the utility batteries in (it was a camper van) I soldered everything. I designed my own fuse box and distribution strips etc. It was rock solid and all the internal stuff was even heat shrinked. That van is no longer mine but it will not have a single issue for decades I'm sure :)
This collab is awsome
wow this video is just AMAIZING, really helpful information, the right kind of tips, thanks Ronny Dahl and Mr. Andrew for this great video
Loved this, great to see you guys having a natter like this - we need more! :-)
Love your vids, Ronny! So much good knowledge and honest advice here! I'm a fledgling overlander here in the U.S. and hope to experience overlanding in South America and Australia one day, as well. Your vids have been indispensable in helping me equip myself sensibly and use my equipment correctly. Thanks; and keep up the great work!
Most informative vid that I have seen from either Ronny or Andrew. Sort of a blend of Obi-Wan & Yoda. Great food for thought
Hahaha love this comment. So who is who?
Obi-Wan had the beard and Yoda was... well... not a 6 footer :D
Two legends man ! Learnt so much from these guys
It is great to see both of you in the same video.
Best collaboration!!! thx for upload high quality video.
Brakes are always the most overlooked upgrade in the truck/ute and suv/wagon market. As your vehicle gets loaded up, the factory brakes are going to more likely to overheat, possibly even lock up.
Great video Ronny, I have enjoyed your Videos and trips and Tips. I have watched many of Andrew's videos. I find that you both produce excellent videos and enjoy seeing the outback, and Andrew's trips around Southern Africa.
Looking forward to seeing more videos from both of you and hopefully trips you do together.
Now this is how a video presenting knowledge should be done; open discussion about what's useful and what's useless vs BUY BUY BUY, SELL SELL SELL! Thank you
Fantastic to see you 2 come together. Bet you could spend weeks at a campfire, chatting away!
+icingfeestbeest yeah I reckon, a fair bit of time was spent chatting before and after the shoot. Too much to chat about...
If it wasn't for u an your channel my build was going a hole different way then I started watching your channel an my xj is going overland now thanks for your videos an sharing your knowledge.
Enjoy both of your guy's videos. Good work on collaborating. Jealous of the 70's series LC's being in Canada....
Great vid...Cheers
Good to see you here Andrew.
BRILLIANT.
I am a long time subscriber to both your channels.
Welcome to WA Andrew, and we did the canning last year so enjoy.
When you mentioned recovery gear and how to use it you should also mention some of the training organizations around.. like "Ultimate 4wd training". Invaluable to avoid the inserted picture of the towball in the rear door.