unless you slavishly waxoyl them, yeah
My long term plan is to rebuild an old one on galv chassis etc - best of all worlds
Dom.
Do it! As per my handle, i used to have a not very original 86" Series One that i completely rebuilt on a galvanised chassis, It has a galvanised bulkhead too... a 5 main bearing 2.25 petrol, Synchro box, pendulum pedals, parrots and lots of other user friendly goodies. Mainly S3 running gear.
It was superb we went everywhere in it, but the onset of family life left it unused, so i sold it on. I wish to this day i hadn't, but when the boys get older i can see myself doing it all again to an early Ninety or something.
This is one instance where Land Rovers don't really have any peers... total and complete rebuildability, at very reasonable cost. My own 110 will be getting this treatment eventually, because it will be cheaper than buying a newer car, and it will last even longer.
Toyota pick ups and other japanese utility vehicles maybe reliable and last well, but they have a point in their life at maybe 12-14 years old when they are realistically worthless. So they will be scrapped. Compare that to your average Land Rover when at 12 years old are probably worth at least 30-40% of their purchase price and have a long future in front of them. We sold our original 90TD CSW for £4500, when it was 21 years old. The original purchase receipt was for just over £10K!
I'm often intrigued by the total slating Land Rovers get from all and sundry, but there is a question i often pose to them..... "if Land Rovers were so unreliable and rubbish, why are there so many old ones happily running around??"
I'm with Klenchblaize with that new ones shouldn't be rusty at only 4 years old. This is not on, but i'm always mystified as to why the consensus is that "Land Rovers are rubbish" when in reality, the evidence says otherwise?