View allAll Photos Tagged offroader
C.H.C has moved to a whole sim !!
A level with the store and some roads, a skytrack , and on the ground level, the place for try the offroaders.
1985 Land Rover Range Rover Classic Rometsch Jagdwagen Nr.2 at the Techno Classica in Essen.
Four of these were built for Erich Honecker, the first was modified by Morgan/Panther-Westwinds and the rest by Rometsch.
Of course all hunting cars were paid with state money...
"To build (the VW Beetle) commercially would be a completely uneconomic enterprise." - official British report, 1945.
Okay, so this one is the odd one out. I know Beetles never rolled out of the factory on knobblies, (do Typ 87s count?) but there are enough Baja Bugs around that I feel this one is sort of justified, even if it's not a "true" offroader.
My first car was a battleship-grey '70 Beetle. It had been in my father's family for 3 generations, and was still in very good condition. Converting it into a Baja Bug would've been a crime. If I had a different Beetle and some spare cash now, however...
Also, Lego Beetles are hard.
A green Star 244 representing the 4x4 wheel drive variant of the Star 200 family is resting on a construction site in Warsaw's Białołęka district. Sadly, one of the letters constituting the logo of Star fell off :(. The licence plates on it belong to a 1977-produced Jelcz W640JS.
Due to the reconstruction of Kąty Grodziskie street, a big team of old construction vehicles was transported here from Wołomin. Other ones include a Star 266 and a couple of MAZ trucks.
Photo by Piotrek/Toprus
The big wheel of the "Ultra Stealth Raider " was the starting point for this MOC. I only have this one, so what could I use it for?
The result is a futuristic, five-wheeled offroader. The look of it reminds me a bit of the Beetle or the Kübelwagen ("The Thing") from Volkswagen, so I put the printed VW tiles on the wheels.
But why on earth would one build a five-wheeled car like this? No clue! Yes, the traction is probably pretty good but the view from the cockpit is pretty one-sided...
Avia A31 (1983-1996) of the Turecká municipality sits near the fire dept building in said village. All around the place are remains of old vehicles used by the local government - mainly a couple of Praga V3S offroaders.
Photo by Piotrek/Toprus
"♪ There was no place in Namaqualand that we couldn't go
♪ In our feul injected all-wheel-drive new Volksiebus Syncro".
If I could choose an old offroader to own, it would be the Syncro. I've loved these since as far back as I can remember.
Click here for a really old South African Syncro commercial from my childhood. These were the kind of ads that always made me associate the Syncro with fun.
I've built this previously, but I didn't get it quite right then. I think this is a much better version.
"The Rambo Lambo"
For some reason I've known about the LM002 since I was a kid (I'm not much older than it), but it's that kind of vehicle I instantly forget about. Occasionally I'll see a picture of it somewhere and go "Oh. Yeah...Lamborghini built an offroader once, didn't they..." and then forget about it again.
This thing even had the V12 from a Countach and could do 210 km/h, but for some reason didn't do very well commercially.
This build was pretty easy. It's remarkably easier to build details when you have 8 studs instead of 6 to work with.
I'm fairly proud of the quad bike and drone.