![]() 03/22/2015 at 20:06 • Filed to: None | ![]() | ![]() |
![]() 03/22/2015 at 20:15 |
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Are you checking it twice?
![]() 03/22/2015 at 20:47 |
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Considering I made the list and felt like I was forgetting something,
yes.
![]() 03/22/2015 at 22:06 |
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This is dangerous. I did it on Rock Auto with my Jeep once, wound up with a $2500 cart... Which is pretty well what I paid for it in the first place...
![]() 03/23/2015 at 09:13 |
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Right now I'm at like $26. The joys of a 60 year production run, everything is cheap.
![]() 03/23/2015 at 23:56 |
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My daily driver has been in production since '77. Yes, I suppose parts can be found cheap, but they're all on the other side of the Atlantic! My Niva would likely run up a similar bill to the MJ if I factored in shipping costs.
![]() 03/24/2015 at 08:55 |
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Yeah they sold these things everywhere.
First car to drive on Antarctica, as a matter of fact.
![]() 03/24/2015 at 11:01 |
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Nivas were also sold just about everywhere. They've been on Antarctica as well. A couple Russians also drove one to the geographic North Pole (after they were air-dropped at a research station 100 odd km away) several years before the Top Gear expedition to the magnetic pole. Unfortunately they weren't sold in sufficient quantify in my corner of the world to keep a decent parts network around 15 years after they pulled out of the market. :(
![]() 03/24/2015 at 11:30 |
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Are those things 4x4?
![]() 03/26/2015 at 00:58 |
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The Nivas are, yes. Or at least they're AWD with a locking centre diff and low-range transfer case... there's no 2wd option.