Landrover have always been short of capital, and their products have always shown it. As Phillip says, their first Landrover was a copy of the Jeep - but so was the first Landcruiser, and the first jeep was an even closer copy of the Bantam, which in turn was a sort of copy of the Austin 7. It turned out, by luck, that the first Landrover's construction method, chosen to use available materials and minimum tooling, made it far more versatile than anything else on the market.
The first Rangerover came with only two doors because they couldn't afford the tooling for the four door model - and I don't think you could call it a copy of the Bronco, although the concept was similar.
I think you have hit a nail on the head though, as I commented in another post, Toyota have been very good at changing the design to suit Australian requirements, where with Landrover we got whatever they thought was suitable for the rest of the world. And fuel tanks are a major point. In my view, any car sold in Australia should have a range of at least 1000km, and offroad vehicles should be more. But have Australians been all that good in the past? Who remembers that at the time Landrovers had a ten and a half gallon tank giving a range of 180 miles if you were lucky, the "pure bred" Australian Holden had an eight gallon tank with a range of 200 miles if you were lucky. This in an environment where most petrol stations closed from about 5.30pm, closed 1pm Saturday and closed all day Sunday, with, for example, only one all night service station between Brisbane and Sydney.
Landrover were hardly the first with air suspension - dates back to the early sixties for Cadillac and Mercedes for example, and oleopneumatic self levelling in Citroens from 1954, licenced to Rolls Royce from 1970.
But they did have some firsts or at least near firsts - first successful coil suspension offroad car, one of the first small turbodiesels in a mass produced car.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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