For versatility I would say Prado, but he should try and force some choice. Can not see why they would only give you that choice.
Friend on a package has option between 4cyl Turbo Prado or the Forester. Mainly highway on tar but some dirt work.
What are your thoughts?
Would like a Discovery but not possible been told.
Last edited by Roverray; 29th September 2007 at 05:52 AM.
For versatility I would say Prado, but he should try and force some choice. Can not see why they would only give you that choice.
2011 Discovery 4 TDV6
2009 DRZ400E Suzuki
1956 & 1961 P4 Rover (project)
1976 SS Torana (project - all cash donations or parts accepted)
2003 WK Holden Statesman
Departed
2000 Defender Extreme: Shrek (but only to son)
84 RR (Gone) 97 Tdi Disco (Gone)
98 Ducati 900SS Gone & Missed
Facta Non Verba
Some tie up with part ownership of dealer franchise I think.
subaru forester - I have 2 and love them. Have a friend who does large miles around crookwell - also has 2 for his veterinary practice.
Have to agree with you - the wife bought one six months ago. It is a fantastic car - around town and on the highway - I cannot praise it enough. It is everything a car should be - don't know what it would be like off-road - not particularly good I imagine but that is what my "Fender is for.![]()
http://i271.photobucket.com/albums/j...KevsAvatar.jpg
Defender '06 - (+ Tombie's Magic)
Gone but not forgotten
Defender 03 (Rolled)
'99 TDI Discovery
'96 V8 Discovery
'86 V8 County (Life's regret selling this)
Series III
you'd be surprised - height yes is a limitation but I've used mine in all sorts of situations across paddocks and in the bush. As far as the required use by question asker - the rubie is such a pleasure to drive. (Having said that I must admit new Prado is also very suitable).
for a tourer or run about i'd go the Subaru ......
much more user friendly around town
plus they look better![]()
130's rule
Not a Forrester, but a friend of mine had an Outback which he said was bloody awful - ok on the tar but not good elsewhere and had major reliablity problems and oil use. He sold it with 25,000km and bought a D3 TDV6 SE and has never looked back. A landy success story
However I think he would still prefer the Subaru to a Prado - The diesels are (apparently) real dogs.
REMLR 243
2007 Range Rover Sport TDV6
1977 FC 101
1976 Jaguar XJ12C
1973 Haflinger AP700
1971 Jaguar V12 E-Type Series 3 Roadster
1957 Series 1 88"
1957 Series 1 88" Station Wagon
My sister has a Prado, its OK.
My brother in law had a Forester and a couple of years ago and I got roped in to going for a drive as instructer with his daughter out of Launceston thru the hills. She was doing 100 kph on bitumen road and I said "gravel road ahead" as there was a sign. She kinda said "Doh" so I thought this was a well traversed road by her and she slowed up to about 85k. Well the road not only went to gravel but became a twisty mountainous treacherous road in an instant. We hit a hard left followed by a really hard right waaay too fast, added to that she was centred on the loose stuff. I immediately took a firm grip on whatever was bolted down as she braked hard mid corner. I might have shouted out "NO" but I really did'nt think anything would have helped at that point- been there done that a few times in different vehicles anyway, as far as I was concerned we were going bush.
To my absolute and continuing incedulity this little car tracked regardless of all the wrong driver input.
I will always remember that one, probably more so than the times I have parted company with terra firma.
It will hold better value to boot- but one will never replace my County..![]()
I do lots of work on gravel roads with my ruby and that description is typical - BUT - I've nearly been through a fence or two in one car I had which had ABS and it just wouldn't stop. These cars love dirt roads! I had the misfortune twice of driving Prados on the dirt - they scared the living daylights out of me.
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