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Thread: How brand loyal are you?

  1. #31
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    Quote Originally Posted by samuelclarke View Post
    No thanks. Part of the reason I own a Land Rover is the brand and history...you don't get that anywhere else.
    ...
    If you look you might find that Santana have been building Landies for almost as long as Land Rover have themselves.


    Quote Originally Posted by Didge View Post
    You''ll all have women wearing burkas and have rags on ya heads if ya start giving em ya money!!!!!! (apart from the fuel - that's bad enough)
    They've already invaded us and it'll only get worse !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! lolk at England and France!
    OMFG - please tell me you didn't really type that dribble.

  2. #32
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    Quote Originally Posted by VladTepes View Post
    I want to know how they get away with such blatant design copying.
    Iran, just like Santana in Spain, PMC in Enfield NSW and Port Elizabeth in South Africa were the major Land Rover CKD assembly and manufacturing plants.

    This is likely just a development of that production, probably when Jaguar Rover decided to remove production from them just like they did to JRA out at Moorebank. Except the Iranians did something about it rather than just sitting back and accepting the fact!

    Looks like they are actually improving the designs instead of going backwards like the P38a diff.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  3. #33
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    Quote Originally Posted by Hymie View Post
    What gets me is that in the Land of the Wrong White Crowd, (New Zeelund), you can buy them but you can't in Oz.
    Massif? No you can't. I even phoned the National Sales Manager at Iveco to ask why not, his answer was that they are only concentrating on the large trucks and a few Daily vans. There are no plans to sell the Massif in NZ.

    If I had the chance I'd be in like Flynn.

    About the Iranian stuff. Never seen those here, but they do look interesting.

    Edit: PS. Don't be confused by the All Blacks advertising. There were two brought to NZ for the promotional shots a few years ago. They were then shipped back again.

    PPS. I remembered one of the reasons. I think there are no RHD Massif's, but I could be wrong.
    Alan
    2005 Disco 2 HSE
    1983 Series III Stage 1 V8

  4. #34
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    I could be wrong here, but I believe that the Series 3 design was sold to Santana and then development continued to form the base of the PS10 and then Massif. Santana then sold the Series III design to Morottab who developed it in a different direction, possibly with inspiration from a Defender but the main reason it looks so much like a Defender is it is based on a licensed Series III design. I think it would be pretty hard to sue anyone for design breaches over a coil-sprung version of a 1958 vehicle design. The best Land Rover could do would be to keep them out of developed markets, which they seem to have done.
    Steve

    2003 Discovery 2a
    In better care:
    1992 Defender
    1963 Series IIa Ambulance
    1977 Series III Ex-Army
    1988 County V8
    1981 V8 Series 3 "Stage 1"
    REMLR No. 215

  5. #35
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    Quote Originally Posted by scrambler View Post
    I could be wrong here, but I believe that the Series 3 design was sold to Santana and then development continued to form the base of the PS10 and then Massif. <snip>
    Santana were a factory producing Land Rover under licence. They produced a 6cyl engine based on the Land Rover 2 1/4 litre engine and the 110/County models sold throughout the world were using a 5 speed gearbox designed and built by Santana (LT85). They also produce an LT230 built under licence with selectable 2/4WD in place of the centre diff. You can even use the Santana selectable drive system in your Defender LT230.

    Remember we were pressing panels from the 1960's and right through to the 110's. PMC/JRA were also using locally produced mechanical components like Rover diffs produced by Borg-Warner and axles by DuFor and dare I say it Isuzu supplied engines. JRA Moorebank were tooled up to build the coil sprung 110 when production ended in the late 1980's, it is likely that Iran was similarly tooled up.

    It is a small step to migrate to alternative (even more reliable) power plants than the Tdi series of Land-Rover items and manufacturing licenced (even unlicenced) copies of transmissions similarly not a problem.

    You can see a Dana type front diff and the rear diff appears central so perhaps they are using a Dana Jeep transmission as well.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  6. #36
    Didge Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by isuzurover View Post
    If you look you might find that Santana have been building Landies for almost as long as Land Rover have themselves.




    OMFG - please tell me you didn't really type that dribble.
    HAHAHA! I knew I'd elicit some sort of response like that. In fact, of all the Middle Eastern people, the Iranians (or Persians as the ones I've met like to be called) are the most likeable and inoffensive. It's only "Ahm a dinner jacket" and the revolutionary guard that are militants from what I've read. I really was just having a joke. Hey, why don't we start building them here, but fix up all the faults? Who's up for starting an Australian company building a faultless Defender that runs on the smell of an oily rag and is a mechanical leap ahead of the current one?

  7. #37
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    Quote Originally Posted by Didge View Post
    HAHAHA! I knew I'd elicit some sort of response like that. In fact, of all the Middle Eastern people, the Iranians (or Persians as the ones I've met like to be called) are the most likeable and inoffensive. It's only "Ahm a dinner jacket" and the revolutionary guard that are militants from what I've read. I really was just having a joke. Hey, why don't we start building them here, but fix up all the faults? Who's up for starting an Australian company building a faultless Defender that runs on the smell of an oily rag and is a mechanical leap ahead of the current one?
    Sure - how much money do you need?
    Steve

    2003 Discovery 2a
    In better care:
    1992 Defender
    1963 Series IIa Ambulance
    1977 Series III Ex-Army
    1988 County V8
    1981 V8 Series 3 "Stage 1"
    REMLR No. 215

  8. #38
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lotz-A-Landies View Post
    Santana were a factory producing Land Rover under licence. They produced a 6cyl engine based on the Land Rover 2 1/4 litre engine and the 110/County models sold throughout the world were using a 5 speed gearbox designed and built by Santana (LT85). They also produce an LT230 built under licence with selectable 2/4WD in place of the centre diff. You can even use the Santana selectable drive system in your Defender LT230.

    Remember we were pressing panels from the 1960's and right through to the 110's. PMC/JRA were also using locally produced mechanical components like Rover diffs produced by Borg-Warner and axles by DuFor and dare I say it Isuzu supplied engines. JRA Moorebank were tooled up to build the coil sprung 110 when production ended in the late 1980's, it is likely that Iran was similarly tooled up.

    It is a small step to migrate to alternative (even more reliable) power plants than the Tdi series of Land-Rover items and manufacturing licenced (even unlicenced) copies of transmissions similarly not a problem.

    You can see a Dana type front diff and the rear diff appears central so perhaps they are using a Dana Jeep transmission as well.
    guess only problem would be that none of those more desirable engines would met our emissions regulations and so are cut out of our market
    Friend wanted to bring near new tdi (2001) build (found in holland ) no chance as not emissions 4 regulation engine !!!

  9. #39
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    Quote Originally Posted by sashadidi View Post
    guess only problem would be that none of those more desirable engines would met our emissions regulations and so are cut out of our market
    Friend wanted to bring near new tdi (2001) build (found in holland ) no chance as not emissions 4 regulation engine !!!
    If we were going to build an Aussie Defer, most of us would be wanting to stay with Isuzu engines and probably their gearboxes. We know that Isuzu have EuroIV compliant 3litre TD engines and will be undoubetedly have upgraded ones in the pipeline.

    You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.

  10. #40
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    Quote Originally Posted by sashadidi View Post
    guess only problem would be that none of those more desirable engines would met our emissions regulations and so are cut out of our market
    Friend wanted to bring near new tdi (2001) build (found in holland ) no chance as not emissions 4 regulation engine !!!
    Mmm don't know how that was as my 95 tdi came into Aus in 2005 and was not tested for emissions. No body even looked at the engine

    I was told it goes on the year it was made regs and not the year you import it so a 1971 diesel Landy would still be able to be imported into Aus today as it would have to meet the Aus 1971 regs and not the regs of today


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    95 300 Tdi Defender 90
    99 300 Tdi Defender 110
    92 Discovery 200tdi
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    50 Series 1 80


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