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Customs

1998 Defender 130 HCPU

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ALLOY-LUIA!

Stacked with aluminium accessories from top to bottom, this award-winning Defender looks a million bucks - and everything's functional, too!

WORDS BY MIKE JACOBSON PHOTOGRAPHY BY ROBB COX

Steel or aluminium? Throw that hot potato into your next campfire discussion and duck for cover. Both have their pros and cons: steel wins on price and strength, aluminium on weight and corrosion. One man who's well and truly in aluminium's corner is Ken Wright. An ex-panel beater, Ken's been making things from the lightweight alloy for donkey's years. He reckons that you can use aluminium for a helluva lot of stuff on a fourby, and his Defender 130 HCPU (High-Capacity Pick-Up) is living proof. Ken's company, Aluminium Engineering, in Brookvale on Sydney's northern beaches, made most of the bolt-ons for the Defender. Not just light-duty stuff like radiators and interior fittings, but serious gear like the bullbar, rear bar, sidesteps, scrub bars and bash plates.

It's just a matter of picking the right type and thickness of the metal, he says. "Aluminium is about half the strength of steel but a third the weight, so twice the thickness gives you the same strength for two-thirds the weight!" Makes sense. Ken became a Landy nut - is there any other kind? - in 1998 after shopping around for a 4WD ute to convert into a go-anywhere camper for himself and wife Maria. He wanted A1 off-road ability (scratch IFS), coils all-round (delete 78/79 Series) and a dual-cab (bye-bye GU). In typical Landy fashion, the Defender ute's wheelbase is 3in shy of the advertised 130, but it still beats a 78/79 Series by 122mm. Lots of room for Ken to let his imagination run wild in the ute 'tub' (see More than a canopy)

Don't let those ‘Tdi’ decals fool you, though. This Defender has got some serious stonk, in the form of an International HS2.8 TGV. It's a step up the evolutionary ladder from the original Tdi 300, and gives the Td5 a run for its money (see Down the Driveline).
From our photos, you might think Ken's truck is a bit over the top with all that shiny aluminium. But while it's a triple People's Choice award-winner at the NSW Land Rover Club's annual Sydney Expo, nothing's just for show. "Every modification has at least one practical use," he said. F'rinstance, the rear bumper is a bash bar, step, 65L water tank, Hi-Lift jack mount and towbar! On most trips, Ken tows a custom aluminium boat trailer with an electric tilt winch to ease loading and unloading. The ‘tinny’ is actually an aluminium 4.2m Seajay with a custom roof, weather-protection panels and 50hp outboard.
Ken had just come back from a trip when we chatted about his 130. "I picked up a Defender ute 'tub' along the way," he said. "It'd make a good little trailer."
The mind boggles. A couple of things stand out on this Defender's suspension; the standard coils and twin OME shocks. The springs' longevity is probably as much due to Ken's skilful driving as Land Rover engineering. It can't have anything to do with the dual dampers on each corner, ‘cause they were fitted - with help from Specialised Land Rover Services (www.fix4x4.com) - after our photo shoot!

While Ken's unsure about the HS2.8 TGV's exact DNA, he believes the motor started life in Brazil. A factory there kept making the indirect-injection, mechanical fuel pump, pushrod, four-cylinder 300 Tdi after Land Rover switched to the direct-injection, EFI, SOHC, five-pot Td5 c.2000. A Pommy mob, Motor and Diesel Engineering (Anglia) Ltd (www.mdengineering.co.uk), imports the 2495cc Tdi replicas back 'home' and gives ‘em a thorough working over. Apart from an extra 290cc, the mods run to a redesigned block for better cooling, a forged crank instead of a cast one, a better rear crank seal to stop oil leaks (really!), stronger conrods, different pistons, a laminate head gasket and a revised combustion system.

The result: power up from 85kW to 101, and torque up from 265Nm to 375Nm. That's 11kW and 75Nm more than a Defender Td5! (The Defender's Td5 is detuned from the Discovery auto’s 101kW.) They ain't cheap, though. Ken reckons his cost around $14K, including spares. And a few thou in airfreight, because he couldn't wait for it to come by sea. "A mate had some experience in this sort of major job, but he would have left town by the time the ship arrived and so it was a case of do it now or wait another year," Ken said.
"It was fairly straightforward. We had to make a 'power bulge' in the sub frame with slide-hammer, and built a new intercooler three times the size of the original one."

Cooling was an issue after Ken replaced the viscous-coupling radiator fan with a thermostatically controlled electric one. He's gone to great lengths to keep the power-sapping fan switched off as much as possible. The air-conditioner heat exchanger and cooling fans are now in the front roofrack, the radiator and water pump have been uprated, the exhaust went to Competition Coatings in Guildford for a ceramic treatment, and air vents poke out of the bonnet and front mudguards. There's a turbo timer to keep the engine idling when the hairdryer is still a bit hot after a hard run, and a Kenlowe 24OV pre-heater to minimise engine wear on the short drive to and from Ken's factory.

Before the engine transplant, Ken fitted an auto to the Tdi after an industrial injury to his hip made manual gear changing too painful. He bought an ex-Range Rover ZF four-speed from SA in "a box of bits", and had them rebuilt by Col Voss Automatic Transmissions in Brookvale. Ken fitted it with an oil cooler, and put a second Safari snorkel on the passenger's side to feed air into the tunnel. "A bloke with a Troopie told me he'd heard about the idea," he said. As well as the standard centre diff lock, there's an ARB Air-Locker in the front and a Maxi-Drive locker in the rear. Like the Air-Locker, the Queensland-built Maxi-Drive is also driver-activated, but it uses vacuum from the engine inlet manifold (via a tank) instead of compressed air. Ken's happy with the BFG A/Ts on Defender Xtreme alloys, and while the brakes are okay, he's looking at bumping up the discs. UK Scorpion front-wheel spacers have reduced the 130's ocean-liner turning circle.

This one's a stunner from every angle. Not just because most of the add-ons are in polished aluminium, but because there are so damned many of ‘em! Here's a run-down of the feature attractions. The chunky winch bar is structural-grade alloy with holes on the passenger's side that feed cool air into the engine bay. The winch is a Ramsey 9000 low-mount wound with lightweight (of course) Polaris rope, and stainless wire mesh protects the radiator. Two of the four Hella driving lights have gone since our photo shoot because Ken reckoned two were enough, and that box on the bonnet holds a ground anchor.
The rear bar does everything except make a pot of tea (see main story), and ahead of the back wheels are 4L reserve oil tanks and ground-support/jack bases.
Let's not forget underneath. Bash plates protect the steering drag link and engine sump, while down the back is a 120L long-range fuel tank fitted by Northshore 4WD in Artarmon.
In the middle are two 32L aluminium tanks - one fuel and the other water, with an electric pump. Both have vents poking out between the cabin and ute 'tub'. Did I mention the two air-receiver tanks and the compartment where Ken chucks his muddy boots before climbing aboard? Sorry.

On the roof are two aluminium roofracks. The one over the cabin's a bi-level affair with the air-con heat exchanger and a remote-controlled swivelling marine spot lamp. The rack over the canopy sits behind a pair of Solex 4.5A solar panels. Ken's gone to a lot of trouble to make the Defender's bare-bones interior more homely and practical. A dashboard pod holds VDO oil-temperature and pressure gauges and the original analogue clock, while smack bang in the middle is a TV screen hooked up to the Clarion reversing camera that peeks out over the kerbside tail-lights! Down on the floor, the 'railway-signal-box' handbrake lever has been moved to a less-annoying position.

The starter battery is now under the driver's seat. Where it used to be - under the passenger's seat - are two smaller batteries, separate from the cranker and kept charged by the solar cells on the roof (see Outside story). Under his seat, Ken has a Super Panther MkIII AM CB and a GME Electrophone hand-held TX6000 UHF. A GPS is on the shopping list. The two back-seat passengers get a comfy ride on front-type seats that have replaced the old bench. Each seat has a storage compartment underneath, and there's a Hi-Lift jack jammed in there somewhere. An overhead light comes in handy to check the stock of coldies in the Autofridge between the two buckets!

MORE THAN A CANOPY

To call the bodywork on the back of Ken's Defender a 'canopy' is like calling Michael Schumacher's Formula-One Ferrari a 'car'. It's made to look like a Defender wagon from the back, with a custom version of the trademark centre door, complete with spare wheel, flanked by authentic windows.
This masterpiece in aluminium is fully lined inside, with lighting, power outlets, shelves, a storage cupboard and tinted wind-out windows that have their own security screens.
There's a 198x130cm (6ft 6in x 4ft 3in) double bed that lifts on either side to reveal storage boxes below. A two-burner gas stove swings into place at the back, and a shelf hinged to the door conveniently locks into place ready to chop the onions - or rest your beer!
A sliding window between the camper and cabin also swings up on gas struts, with a two-piece flexible seal to keep out the wind and rain.
Outside are a couple of compartments - a small one next to the fuel filler for the gas bottles, and a bigger one for a gas lamp and other bulky stuff. An awning made from foam, sandwiched between aluminium panels, slides out on runners under the rear roofrack.
The ladder to the roof also holds an Evinrude 4hp outboard motor that powers Ken's canoe when he's sick of paddling, or the tinny if the main motor gives trouble.

BRIEFLY
VEHICLE: 1998 Defender 130 HCPU
CHASSIS: Ladder-frame
BODY: Dual-cab utility with custom camper canopy
ENGINE: International HS2.8 TGV (2.8L intercooled indirect-injection turbo-diesel inline-4, 101kW and 375Nm
GEARBOX: Range Rover 4-speed ZF automatic
TRANSFER CASE: Full-time 4WD, low-range 3.320:1
TRACTION AIDS: Factory centre-differential lock, ARB front Air-Locker, Maxi-Drive rear locker
SUSPENSION: Front - rigid axles (3-link), standard coil springs, dual Old Man Emu gas-pressurised hydraulic dampers. Rear - rigid axles (5-link), standard coil springs, dual Old Man Emu gas-pressurised hydraulic dampers
STEERING: Power-assisted recirculating-ball
BRAKES: Front - ventilated discs. Rear - solid discs
TYRES AND WHEELS: 235/85 BFGoodrich All-Terrain T/As on 16x7in Defender Xtreme alloy rims



 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
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