As I’ve been told (many, many
times), “Babies change things.” The urgency of some of these changes are more
obvious than others. One of these immediate changes was vehicle. As anyone who
has ridden in the back of our old Suzuki Samurai could tell you, it was no
place for a small child (or any human being for that matter). It seems that
when Suzuki was in their final design phases with this vehicle that they
suddenly realized that they hadn’t designed a back seat. Some intern then ran
out back and pulled off some metal trash can lids and wrapped some old pants
around them, which Suzuki apparently promptly worked into production as a
finished design.
So, we’ve purchased a brand new used
vehicle, a 1991 Nissan Pathfinder. We’ve been slowly making it Honduras ready
(roof rack, decent all-terrain tires, additional lighting, etc). It’s kind of
unique because it has a motor that they didn’t sell in the US, a 2.7 Turbo
Diesel, which has already won me over. Stacey is won over by the AC, real back
seats, and a suspension that doesn’t necessitate a kidney transplant.
I do miss the Suzuki already (we
made the swap in December), but it was a necessary change. In tribute, I’ve
written a review below.
1996
Suzuki Samurai
When you first check out a Samurai, the
production year is immediately brought into question. Round, sealed-beam
headlights? No power steering? Is that a choke-knob? Manually-tightened seat-belts? No air conditioning? No torsion
bars or coils? No carpet? The thing is a true throwback, not just in styling
like the wave of posers from the early 2000s.
To say the thing lacks refinement
would be a cruel understatement to a potential buyer. Golden Corral lacks
refinement, but it is at least an environment suitable for human life. Driven
on Honduran roads, the Suzuki is rough. It seems that its sole purpose is to
bruise you with its sparsely-adorned, all-metal, sharp-cornered interior, of
which all surfaces are always ~2.5” inches away at any moment. This brutality is
mostly due to its Medifast curb weight and cutting edge leaf springs at all four corners. That being said, in
two years of truly abusive usage on terrible unpaved roads, over rocks, through
mud, into car-slaying potholes, never once did the suspension need an ounce of adjustment.
It is tough.
The motor is a thing of beautiful
simplicity. Four tiny cylinders in a straight line with a carburetor on top. It
doesn’t take an Audi certified master mechanic to understand this vehicle’s
mechanicals. It is almost like it was built to show people how motors work. I’m
not sure if you caught the word “tiny” earlier, but tiny here means that all
said and done, the displacement of this motor barely competes with a standard
Nalgene bottle. 1.3 liters working for a grand total of 63 hp. I hope you’re
not in a hurry. All-in-all, it was a great little motor except for the little
detail of consistent overheating. To be fair, we are in a really hot
environment and would often abuse it on terrible rural roads then drive it at
full speed into the city and then sit in 100 degree traffic for an hour. I was
overheated, no wonder the car was. Those being said, once you warp the heads on
these things, get ready to spend some cash to get it reworked or better yet
replaced.
The simple, slick-shifting
five-speed transmission never failed and was one of the snickiest stick-shift
experiences I’ve had in a 4x4 vehicle. Placement was easy, quick, and sure.
Handy since you often need both hands to crank the wheel in tough off-road type
situations. The 4x4 transfer was pretty finicky and once replaced. With the new
used one, I often had to pull out the shift arm and boot to realign the
internal pins. Caught without a screwdriver once about two-hours away from
pavement, we did the operation with a machete tip.
Despite its overwhelming downfalls,
this has to be one of my favorite vehicles that I’ve ever owned. Its (painful)
simplicity draws you in. On top of that, once you’re actually off-road, this
goofy little thing is nearly unstoppable. Part of that has to do with the
confidence it gives you. It weighs nothing, so you feel like you can hit
obstacles at three-times the speed recommended by your chiropractor (forget
about your back, watch your head). The simple manual hubs lock everything
together to make sure you’re spinning things where they should be spinning. I
can’t count the times that we’ve scooted in somewhere where the rest either
didn’t fit or couldn’t continue.. Its slight size is clearly an advantage in
tight spaces, but even then, its ability to get through the muck is magical.
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