Friday, November 8, 2024

How Australia changed the 4WD that’s influenced designs across the world

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Long before four-wheel drives became ubiquitous — in the country and city — the Land Rover blazed a trail that other makes would follow.

The rugged all-terrain vehicles first arrived in 1948 with perfect timing.

The Snowy Mountains Hydro Electric Scheme, the largest public engineering works in the nation’s history, had just begun.

A man overlooks construction of the Snowy Mountains Hydro-Electric Scheme in 1950.(Supplied: National Archives of Australia)

A fleet was soon ferrying workers and supplies around the snow-clad Australian Alps.

“The Snowy at that stage, the roads were in many cases just tracks, come winter you would need a four-wheel-drive,” Land Rover owner Peter Brett said.

Featured prominently in newsreels of the day, they quickly found a place in the cultural landscape as well.

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“A lot of us were hikers and cross-country skiers, but the Land Rover enabled you to take your family into these places,” Mr Brett said.

“You could have some of the comforts of home and get in and out in a weekend.”

Beginning of the weekender

It opened up a new world of adventures for outdoor types.

“They were the first of the really family outing vehicle,” Justin Burney, from the Land Rover Club of Victoria, said.

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The car took its inspiration from the American Army Jeep, which excelled in some of the toughest terrain on countless battlefields in World War II.

The Rover Car Company chief engineer devised and built a British equivalent in 1947.

Australians quickly realised the vehicle’s capabilities and usefulness.

a line of cars on the ridge of a mountain

The Land Rover club regularly explore together.(ABC News: Tim Lee)

Bridget Larkin owns a 75-year-old vehicle, an early model known as a Series One, which she restored to its original condition.

“I certainly know that the early surveyors who build roads — they were tracks — across the middle of Australia … were in Land Rovers,” Ms Larkin said.

The Queen and Duke of Edinburgh paraded in one when they visited Australia or any other country of the Commonwealth.

The early models had aluminium bodies because post-war Britain had a dire shortage of iron and a surplus of aluminium used for making fighter planes.

“It’s a vehicle that doesn’t have any electronics, in the earlier ones, so they were very fixable on the track or in the bush,” owner Phil Townsend said.

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“The average Joe Blow could get them going again. Pretty agricultural, but very reliable.”

An Aussie touch

Australian owners and enthusiasts were also pivotal in the vehicle’s evolution and improvement.

The Land Rover Club of Victoria, founded in 1963, is believed to be Australia’s oldest four-wheel-drive club.

Peter Brett, a club member since 1969, said he had spent countless weekends pulling apart and re-assembling vehicles.

Car on a mountain

A Land Rover reaches the summit of Mount Terrible.(ABC News: Tim Lee)

“Some of our members tended to hobknob with Land Rover’s engineers in Australia who were pretty receptive most of the time to suggestions,” Mr Brett said. 

“One of our members indeed had removed a complete rear axle assembly and replaced it with an assembly from a light truck.”

The company adopted the improvement, solving the problem of eternally breaking axles, which the early models were known for.

The early models have remained the most popular with most of the Club’s 650 members who undertake monthly outings, travelling in convoy, to remote places all over Australia. 

A woman stands next to a land rover

Bridget Larkin feels safer driving in the bush as part of a group.(ABC News: Tim Lee)

“I’ve always loved them. Classic shape, classic car, never changed,” Ms Larkin said.

“None of my close circle of friends are interested in cars at all and it is an old car, and whenever I go into rugged country I’m always a bit nervous about breaking down.

“I like the support of principally the fellows in this club who with a piece of wire and a pliers can pretty much fix anything.”

Building community 

Club members said they enjoyed the camaraderie and endless talk about the cars around the campfire just as much as they did driving them in the outdoors.

The manufacture of the long familiar, square-shaped vehicle ended in 2016.

 For most in the Land Rover Club of Victoria the newer versions held less appeal.

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