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Chances are you know that Land Rovers got their start as the British version of the Jeep, and that th
were owned by BMW for a while, but did you know the rst Land Rover had the steering wheel in th
middle, or that tank treads used to be a factory option? We dove into their past, and found 20 things
you probably didn't know about Land Rover.
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1. Land Rovers have been around 30 years longer than their company has.
Land Rovers have been built since 1948, when they became the second oldest four wheel drive
vehicles in automotive history after Jeeps. Back then, they were made by Rover, but Land Rover as
company wasn’t founded until 1978, as part of a really odd period of British mismanagement of the
auto industry .
2. The rst Land Rover had the steering wheel in the middle.
It was modeled after WWII-era Jeeps, because the designer had used one on his farm in Wales. To
keep things simple and more tractor-like, the designer just put the steering wheel in the middle . In
doing so he also dodged the pesky nuisance of building two different versions of the car for left and
right hand drive markets.
3. They sponsored the ultimate college joyride.
LR used to provide trucks for students from Oxford and Cambridge to drive across continents to
places like Singapore and the Sahara, “for the sake of learning.” Does your school give credit for epic
road trips? We didn’t think so.
4. The father of Land Rover's larger offspring, the Range Rover, was a jet engine-designing bada
After WWII, Charles S. King worked with Rolls Royce, and helped them develop their rst jet engine
To this day RR makes some of the best jet engines in the world.
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5. By the way, those jet engines? Charlie built a car around one and set the rst turbine powered
world land speed record.
Imagine the conversation, "Hey Charlie, what should we do with all these spare jet engines designed
for airplanes?" Charlie: "I'm gonna bolt one to a car and ride across the desert on top of it."
6. You could order a Land Rover with tank treads in the fties from the Rover factory, because
f*ck you that’s why.
The Series II Cuthbertson was invented by a Scotsman who gured out that treads would enable the
SUV to trek across the Highlands without sinking into the spongy ground. Legend has it that originall
this was a stunt meant to embarrass the English, who weren’t clever enough to come up with the idea
on their own. However, eventually this became a factory option.
7. They also invented the Monster Truck 30 years before anyone else.
In the 1950s, the British Forestry Commission demanded that someone create a road going vehicle
that could tackle even the deepest mud puddles. Land Rover happily obliged, bolting on four tractor
tires and some beefy axles from a Studebaker to a Series IIA, thereby giving birth to the rst monste
truck.
8. Oh, and they made the most grueling off-road challenge in the world their bitch for two
decades.
Land Rover dominated the Camel Trophy , which included treks across places like Siberia, the
Amazon, Tierra del Fuego, and the Australian Outback, with vehicles that were mostly stock. Excep
for uhhh epic in atable boat functionality.
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9. The rst Range Rover was designed in the 1950s, even though Range Rovers didn’t exist until
the 1970s.
It was called the Road Rover, and was based on a car platform, about ve decades ahead of today’s
crossover SUVs.
10. Land Rover hated paying taxes, and went to great lengths to make sure their buyers didn’t
have to either.
The Defender 110 could technically t up to 12 people, qualifying as a “bus” by the taxman’s
standards. This quali cation allowed them to be exempt from the brutal tax system on passenger
vehicles. Extra bonus: you get to use bus lanes and skip out on all that pesky London traf c.
11. They made oating SUVs, because of course.
You’ve gotta really trust your oatation device if you’re gonna oat your SUV down a river.
12. Their military vehicles make Hummers look like toy cars.
The 101 Forward Vehicle was originally built to tow howitzer cannons , and it’s basically Britain’s
answer to the Unimog . It was called the Forward Vehicle because the driver sat forward of the fron
wheels. Crumple zones were clearly not a chief concern here. Getting into the driver's cabin is a bit o
a challenge however, so they had to build a step into the wheel.
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13. The Range Rover was built exactly as the rst prototype was designed. That literally never
happens in the car industry.
Somehow, when they put together the 1966 prototype that ultimately led to production, the lines
never changed.
14. And that design was good enough to get the Range Rover displayed in the Louvre.
Like, the actual Louvre with all the art, because it was considered a masterpiece of industrial design.
15. The rst 25 pre-production Range Rovers were actually called Velars.
This was only done to confuse the general public so they wouldn’t speculate about Range Rover.
16. The second Range Rover ever produced had six wheels, obviously.
It was converted to an airport re truck, and is still in use today.
17. Range Rover won the rst ever Dakar Rally, the legendary race from Paris to Dakar, Senegal
It was an all French team, and they kind of ran away with it.
19. Unsurprisingly, Charlie King hated that Range Rovers became luxury vehicles.
He went on record as saying they had become “an acceptable alternative to Mercedes or BMW for
the pompous, self-important driver”.
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20. By the year 2139, Land Rover will be the only vehicle manufacturer left.
They’ll only make the 101 Forward Vehicle, and they’ll be used as cabs. At least, that’s what they sai
in Judge Dredd. They made a few of these for the movie, by the way, and several of them are still
driven around on the streets of Britain by some very strange, very awesome people.
Aaron Miller is the Rides editor for Supercompressor. He would totally drive a Judge Dredd 101FV on
the street if he owned one, and you can follow him on Twitter .
L IVE L IF E TO TH E TH RIL L IS T