Arabian Cruiser
Arabian Cruisers
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Compression looks good.
As for PS, I noticed that in the beginning as well. The steering seemed flightily. But trust me, it beats no PS when the weather is hot and you have to make a U turn from a standing start. You'll be very glad to have it.
Great find and great start - good luck and will be following your build
Ps - could you post contact info of Al Aswar - any idea if they have a shop in Dubai? Need a few 100 series parts and futtaim is a rip off.
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Lol @boozewz comments! Pics pics pics!
Great find and great start - good luck and will be following your build
Ps - could you post contact info of Al Aswar - any idea if they have a shop in Dubai? Need a few 100 series parts and futtaim is a rip off.
Truck is looking sweet......i'm only a little bit jealousI will need to get down and see it in the flesh. Maybe see if that soft top 40 is still at Motorworld and get your 2 cents on it.
I just wish you guys would start exporting them all here . Well , maybe keep a few for yourselves .
Sarge
A question for you: I have admired all the pavers in Saudi Arabia, where we here simply use asphalt or concrete.
I should think at least asphalt would be plentiful and cheap there. What's the story?
A question for you: I have admired all the pavers in Saudi Arabia, where we here simply use asphalt or concrete.
I should think at least asphalt would be plentiful and cheap there. What's the story?
...Cheap labour...
Very nice clean-up work.
Do your two little ones share who gets to sit in the driver's seat?
I realize this is off-topic, so thank-you for the insight. Is it cheaper to pay for manpower to create the pavers and then to prepare the ground and then have them laid vs. just pouring a concrete slab, or do you know if it is a cultural tradition to have tiles or pavers no matter the cost?
I realize this is off-topic, so thank-you for the insight. Is it cheaper to pay for manpower to create the pavers and then to prepare the ground and then have them laid vs. just pouring a concrete slab, or do you know if it is a cultural tradition to have tiles or pavers no matter the cost?
Thanks for the info about cheap labor costs.
Funny how thousands of years ago the Romans had cobblestones; Europe, too, for hundreds of years.
And in some places to this day, still working the same way.