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Come along to the amazing Summer Moot (21st July - 2nd August), a festival of bushcrafting and camping in a beautiful woodland PLEASE CLICK HERE for more information.
Yeah the petrol engines can be really thirsty, I’ve heard people saying they’re getting under 20MPG. With the Diesel engine I’m running (1.9 TD AAZ) I’m getting 30-35 MPG which is about the same if not a little better than my Defender.
Yeah thats right the 4x4 system was made by Puch. Maybe parts are more easily attainable now or he wasn't looking in the right places. I'm not to familiar with petrol Syncros as I run a diesel. Is he is running a different engine to standard as thats quite common in a lot of the vans. If he's...
The Syncros are good but have limitations like all vehicles, for what we want it for it suits us perfectly. I had a T25 2WD that we used for various camping trips and a Defender 90 which we used to tow our hot air balloon and do a bit off off road driving and wild camping. The Syncro can do all...
The Syncro has one low range gear but because of that you don't have a fifth gear which means the top end suffers a bit. Cruising speed is about 65 MPH at just over 3000 RPM. What I do like though is the front and rear difflocks as standard and a centre decoupler (aftermarket but replaces the...
That’s crazy, I bought one off a farrier in the next village about 8 years ago for £100 and sold it to a mate last year for £100. Came with a stand too.
I just use a ferro rod and generally make a few feather sticks which with a few fine curls will light from the sparks. I try and avoid taking tinder out with me as I find it part of the fun to forage for materials. I do however keep a finger sized piece of fatwood in my pack that I can shave a...
I fitted one in my bell tent when I bought it. Was really straight forward but I was nervous about cutting my brand new tent. The way I done it was to hold the plate against the tent and poke a hole through each corner. I then bolted the stove jack in on the corners then poked through the other...
Oh ok so I guess that's inches of mercury. Its not a unit I'm very familiar with but I think -29.92 inHG is absolute vacuum. So basically the more vacuum the better to out-gas the wood.
What level of vacuum is required to stabilise wood? I work in the vacuum industry and we sometimes scrap various types of pumps that still work but don't provide the correct level of vacuum for their application and are too expensive to repair.
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