Background
It’s really not an exaggeration to say that the Land Rover has done almost as much as Captain Cook or David Livingstone to open up the world. It’s been taking explorers with double-barreled names and extravagant moustaches to far-flung places since 1948. It’s delivered engineers to where they were wanted and missionaries to where they weren’t. It was once said that a Land Rover was the first motor vehicle seen by 60% of people living in developing nations.
For those of us of a certain age, the fact that the Land Rover Series II was launched more than sixty years ago is hard to believe. Aesthetically a massive improvement over the previous model thanks to its (relatively) curvaceous body, it was a welcome update for those folk for whom Solihull’s finest provided the only viable transport to get them around their farms, across vast uncharted swathes of the developing word or somewhere dangerous deep behind enemy lines.
The utterly bulletproof and reasonably economical 2.25-litre petrol engine under the bonnet might not be the last word in grunt but it is hugely reliable and runs with all the silky smoothness of a sewing machine.
Its reliability, longevity and ability to haul the vehicle and its driver out of (or even into) trouble whenever necessary continues to impress to this day.
Series IIs are cheap to insure and can be repaired and maintained by an averagely dextrous gibbon with an adjustable wrench and access to some loose change. The best of these genuinely iconic vehicles offer rock-solid residuals and can only take their prices in one direction.
And if the Series II we’ve got isn’t the best of the best, we’d like to know what is.







