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Those wheels look really familiar. Were the chrome wheels an option or were they S wheels?
How's the mpg with the 6?
The truck gets around 12-13 MPG in city driving, mainly due to its 5,300-pound weight, and the rolling resistance of the two differentials and the centrally mounted transfer case.

G-wagen over W124, hands down. The laws of physics say that any vehicle that is heavier (and the G is heavier than most on the road) is going to offer better crash dynamics, hands down. The G is extremely robust and (unlike Land Rover products) it is extremely difficult to cave the roof in, in a rollover type incident.

Absolutely not. Honestly I don't remember who on this forum owns what type of vehicle and is a fan of what. But I have seen several threads pertaining to crashworthiness comparisons between Range/Land Rovers and MB G-class models, and the general consensus has been that G-class models are considerably safer and stouter.Hmmmmmm.......was that comment directed at anyone in particular??
If your gonna hate on Land Rover's, I may have to go on a Clark Vader type rant.....![]()

Hmmmmmm.......was that comment directed at anyone in particular??
If your gonna hate on Land Rover's, I may have to go on a Clark Vader type rant.....![]()

You know, there are actually quite a lot of nice ones out there, particularly the "MBUSA" models imported from the 2002 model year and newer. The thing about G-wagens is that there are relatively few of them in the US, so they tend to maintain high values and depreciate slowly. Even a 10-year-old G-wagen in decent shape is going to run $35-40KTell us about the search and the acquisition - these things are not exactly growing on trees. Nice examples like yours must be very difficult to find.

Geez, there are SIX different types now... but only one is chlorinated:Replenished my supply of Rick Perry Cleaner yesterday (only legal in4748 states).


I do not even think it is possible to buy the Jerry Brown-spec (California CARB compliant) ultra-low VOC stuff here in the Republic of Texas
Jon,I just bought 8 cans. Great deal. Thanks, Dave!
Gerry, I was thinking it would be nice to live in Texas, but I'm hearing that the progressive trendies from California are moving there and ruining it.
That was a very professional video and it definitely highlights some good reasons for living there. 
Trains don't really have steering wheels. Rather, they have throttles that control the diesel engine, and then by extension the electric traction motors. And then the air brakes & dynamic brakes, of course. So the controls really are more focused on power generation and then managing the mode of the traction motors. In regular forward motion, the traction motors are regular DC motors. When braking, the traction motors are transformed into generators that generate electricity and dissipate a lot of their energy as heat. It's a very complicated dance of constantly maintaining power and braking, and things like mountains make driving trains tremendously complex.Nice picture of the train. Is that a steering wheel up there? For what?
I actually have a spare/new MB cap, rubber washer and little rectangular cap retainer. I should replace them. That's just washer juice (SommerFit) droplets hanging from the underside of the cap.That washer fluid cap is a little tired..![]()

I know, crazy, huh?That´s how usually an engine looks if you get y car from a turkish dealer.....
I actually have a spare/new MB cap, rubber washer and little rectangular cap retainer. I should replace them.
No comments on my overflow tank ?!?
No Armor-All.


No comments on my overflow tank ?!?![]()
No Armor-All.