... and it's almost up there with the Aston Martin Vanquish, which could give a man frost bite at 400 paces.
It, along with the Land Rover Defender, the new Mini and the Renault Avantime are, in fact, the only cars that sit in my 'sub-zero' section on the Cool Wall.
There is another car that could get into this section - providing it's driven by the right sort of person. The Mitsubishi Evo VII. What do you need to make this cool? Simple. Breasts.
By all means get a Defender. If you get a good one, you'll be happy. If you get a bad one, you'll become a philosopher.
apologies to Socrates
Clancy MY15 110 Defender
Clancy's gone to Queensland Rovering, and we don't know where he are
No I don't think I did. We have long distances to cover so we have a number of Australian manufacturers making bigger fuel tanks. You just don't get that in other places round the world. That is our own domestic market. However there is a shrinking market globally for heavy duty 4wds. My point was Australia is too small in population to affect global trends of vehicle sales and therefore type of vehicle. LR couldnt give a **** what Aussies want. We have too few people to affect the marketing decisions of a global company. However we do have enough people to have domestic production of long range tanks be feasible for local manufacturers. I reckon that most of them will be feeling the global trends too though. Make sense?![]()
I think Pricey's point was that while there is a market here for 'industrial' style vehicles (LC79, Defender, etc) there are a few points to consider:
a) There is an existing market leader (Toyota) to compete with. Yes, Toyota customer care can be as bad or worse as Land Rovers, but the fact is they're still a long way ahead. Land Rover would not only have to build something suitable for the environment, they'd also have to set up the infrastructure to maintain them in remote areas while competing with Toyota. Not economically viable for the number of units they'd sell.
b) I'm sure Land Rover cares about what Australians are buying, assuming they're buying the cars that make them money! They don't give a **** about Australians who want a 'new' Defender type vehicle because it competes with the D4, etc for off-road use and there's not that big a market. The Land Rover community in Australia, while sizable, is tiny really.
Sure DM, I hear you and agree to a point...but my disappointment in Land Rover re Defender is that,
a) Toyota took that market share from Land Rover in the 80's in the first place, then Land Rover effectively gave up on the bush and closed most of their service agents across Australia. There's no reason why a re designed Defender can't take back the massive mining, agriculture, military markets worldwide...IF they get the new defender right and IF they wanted to, especially as Toyota is facing the same situation with 70 series. No better time in my opinion, but I agree Land Rover most likely won't because their market is now in luxury, predominantly urban centric vehicles. ...which is what I've been saying all along.
b) I think there actually is that big a market, but it needs to be taken back from Toyota and now Mercedes for defence (worldwide, not just Australia). Very interesting the talk about Magna Steyer in this context of course.
We live in an era where everything is made with an expiry date. Product quality is compromised for a sooner rather than later upgrade.
What this means is that a small niche of die hard 4wd enthusiasts are not a voice to be reckoned with. LR as well as other brands can make more money on targeting the 4wd luxury market and get a return sale/upgrade at a faster rate. It's a case of lower margin with greater volume producing bigger profits. At the end if the day the company's number one concern is to be profitable.
The defender has been on death row for a while and now it's time has finally come. Sad! LR will forever have its place in the history books, it's future lies in mom and dad buyers who are willing to pay for a luxury badge rather than a pedigree tough vehicle.
That's why I consider myself lucky, I bought "Barry" at just the right time. I'm doing everything I can to ensure that I have this vehicle for ever and hopefully outlasts my need for it. I was one of the lucky ones who drove a LR defender, so are a lot of you
Sent from my GT-I9505 using AULRO mobile app
Now that I'm older I could do with less ''tough'' and more under body insulation,better heat proofing,stronger A/C,auto option,better headlights. Pat
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