Results 1 to 6 of 6

Thread: UK Review of 2007 Defender

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Adelaide Hills - SA
    Posts
    12,486
    Total Downloaded
    0

    UK Review of 2007 Defender

    A review from AutoCar UK on the new Defender:

    First Drive




    Land Rover Defender

    Test date 21 March 2007 Price when new £22,530


    What is it?

    You’re kidding, right? Unless you’ve spent the last half century at the bottom of the ocean, you’ll know exactly what this is. Conceived over ten years before the first Mini and now in its 50th year of production, what you’re looking at is the last throw of the dice for what is now called Defender, the most widely known and loved off-roader of them all.
    From the outside you’ll tell it from the car it replaces only from its raised bonnet (required to clear the new engine) and the fact that the vents beneath the windscreen, one of the most iconic signposts of Landie design, have been deleted.
    It’s happened because they could not fit into the new interior package and the new ventilation system means they’re not needed, however much they may be wanted. Inside you’ll find not only new eyeball vents, but a whole new dash, new seats, Disco-derived dials and, at last, reasonably sensible switchgear. The short wheelbase Defender will now only sit four (it used to house seven) and the long one has lost its congestion charge-busting nine seat layout and is now limited to seven.
    Mechanically there’s a 121bhp, 2.4-litre four cylinder engine new to the Defender but very familiar to Ford Transit drivers, complete with its six speed gearbox and spring and damper changes to improve ride and response on and off road.
    What’s it like?

    Better at all the things a Defender needs to be good at, namely getting you places you’d otherwise need some combination of a machete, rope ladder, crampons, Sherpa and pith helmet to reach.
    The new engine has no more power than the five cylinder motor it replaces, but it now has so much torque, it actually has to be electronically restricted during extreme downhill descents off road to stop the car going so slowly the tyres start to lock. A first gear some 32 per cent shorter than the old one helps too. All the old ground clearance and axle articulation remains and it will still wade through half a metre of water without the need for a raised air intake.
    Land Rover has also paid a lot of attention to improving ride and refinement on and off the road so that now it not only offers a more comfortable vantage point from which to view the mountain you’re scaling, it is also rather less wearing on the journey from base camp back to the local town.
    Do not, however mistake it for a car you’d do long distances in by choice. For comfort and quiet, a Discovery has more in common with a Rolls-Royce Phantom than this Defender. Yes it’s no longer excruciatingly crude at speed (with a top speed of 82mph, I use ‘speed’ as a relative term) but it will still take you longer to reach your destination and deliver you in a more frazzled state than almost any other car on sale.
    Should I buy one?

    If you’ve always wanted an original Landie, this is your last chance. Sometime between 2010 and 2014, forthcoming legislation will kill the Defender (it already can’t be sold in the US) and one of the longest lived, and globally loved and iconic cars will cease to exist.
    Designed as a short-term stop gap to combat the Willys Jeep, its iconic angular shape came from the fact that its life expectancy was so short it was not worth investing in tools that made curves. And that aluminium body which ensures that, even today, 70 per cent are still on the road, came about not through thoughts of corrosion resistance and light weight, but because, after the war, there was so much scrap around it was the cheapest material to hand.
    This car will, of course, be replaced. Land Rover already sells 25,000 a year without having to try very hard, but however good is the new one, it will not be a Defender.
    Buy it also if you need an SUV but don’t wish to be targeted by the off-road haters. Sian Berry, who speaks on matters motoring for the Green Party, spends a sizeable chunk of her time slapping fake parking tickets on SUVs, but she’ll never put one on a Defender. Even the greenies understand this car and its unimpeachable place in the nation’s heritage.
    It’s not cheap, some of the interior materials are still shocking, it’s slow, noisy and not very comfortable but, to my eyes at least, it’s still the greatest off-roader of them all.
    Andrew Frankel

    First drive data

    How much?
    • Price when new £22,530
    • Price as tested £22,530
    How fast?
    • 0-62 mph no data
    • Max speed 82 mph
    How big?
    • Weight 1797 kg
    How thirsty?
    • Combined 28.2 mpg
    • CO2 emissions 282 g/km
    Engine
    • Layout 4 , 2401 cc
    • Max power 120 bhp at 3500 rpm
    • Max torque 265 lb ft at 2000 rpm



    CreateAdSlot("http://haynet.adbureau.net", "AUTOCAR", "120x60", "R01");
    CreateAdSlot("http://haynet.adbureau.net", "AUTOCAR", "120x600", "R02");
    CreateAdSlot("http://haynet.adbureau.net", "AUTOCAR", "120x60", "R03");
    CreateAdSlot("http://haynet.adbureau.net", "AUTOCAR", "120x125", "R04");
    CreateAdSlot("http://haynet.adbureau.net", "AUTOCAR", "SCRIPT", "");

  2. #2
    Defender=1st Guest
    Thanks mate very interesting. why are the being discontinued ??

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    4,684
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Defender=1st View Post
    Thanks mate very interesting. why are the being discontinued ??
    Because they are still being sold on a 1948 saftey rating. They have not been test since then and because of a lop hole in the law they don't have to be. Hence why they are one of the only cars sold today which does not have to have Air bags , Abs or crumply zones
    95 300 Tdi Defender 90
    99 300 Tdi Defender 110
    92 Discovery 200tdi
    50 Series 1 80
    50 Series 1 80


    www.reads4x4.com

  4. #4
    Defender=1st Guest
    I have ABS

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
    Location
    Brisbane
    Posts
    4,684
    Total Downloaded
    0
    Quote Originally Posted by Defender=1st View Post
    I have ABS
    Yeah Land rover put it on as they thought they had better and it helps to sell more cars. But they did not have too
    95 300 Tdi Defender 90
    99 300 Tdi Defender 110
    92 Discovery 200tdi
    50 Series 1 80
    50 Series 1 80


    www.reads4x4.com

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2003
    Location
    Gold Coast, Qld.
    Posts
    8,931
    Total Downloaded
    0
    a great little review that one... and yes 2009 i'll pick up a new one to have one of the last of the best

    FOX 2008 RRS - Artemis 1989 Perentie FFR - Phoenix S2a 88" with more - Beetlejuice 1956 S1 86" - GCLRO #001 - REMLR #176
    EVL '96 Defender 110 - Emerald '63 2a Ambulance 112-221 - Christine '93 Rangy - Van '98 Rangy - Rachael '76 S3 GS - Special '70 S2a GS - Miss B '86 Rangy -
    RAAF Tactical 200184 & 200168


Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Search AULRO.com ONLY!
Search All the Web!