Does anyone recall the great Aust 4wd Monthly Shed Sting a while ago.
Maybe i am just cynical and suspicious.
Has anyone heard from Lozza
John
Series 2 LWB - Gone
Series 3 LWB - Gone
Series 1 LWB - Gone
81 RR 2 door - Gone
95 Disco v8 - The Next Victim
You guys crack me up, send me a PM and I'll respond from my Land Rover email account. Then perhaps you/we can have a decent discussion.
Never had this problem on the US forums!!!
P.S. sorry for my typo!!! Well spotted!!!
Loz![]()
Last edited by ORC1; 30th January 2008 at 10:36 PM. Reason: typo
Only two things I want for Christmas is gal on all the steel bits and economical diesels that'll run biodiesel.
If you want a guzzler stick with the V8.
Cheers
Simon
Ron B.
VK2OTC
2003 L322 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Auto
2007 Yamaha XJR1300
Previous: 1983, 1986 RRC; 1995, 1996 P38A; 1995 Disco1; 1984 V8 County 110; Series IIA
RIP Bucko - Riding on Forever
Lawrence
I will take you at face value.
Regarding the US forums - the problem there is that they are full of Yanks. The Americans have always had a so so relationship with the Land Rover marque, sometimes they were importing and selling them but a lot of the time they didn't. Although that said there is a strong enthusiast base for Land Rovers like the Doormobiles and Carawagons in the US.
In Australia we have had an ongoing relationship with the marque from day one, even though for some years Land Rover left the dealers without Series/County/Defender models to sell for over a year at least on one occasion. And other occasions when the NADA spec vehicles had things like tuned Westlake headed Rover 6 cyl while we got detuned standard headed Rover 6 cyl.
At the end of the 1960s Land Rover had the overwhelming majority of the Australian 4 wheel drive market, British Leyland squandered that market lead by giving us things like the Series 3 in the early 1970's when we could have had the County at the same time. Land Rover had all the technology in the Range Rover but didn't translate it to the Defender style vehicle for 15 years, by that time Land Cruiser was holding the majority market share followed closely by Nissan.
At this juncture, Land Rover has an opportunity to recover some of it's traditional market share or potentially loose this faithful market sector altogether.
In these copious volumes of posts there is significant information, much of it using available technology Land Rover already has.
I'll leave it there.
Regards
Diana
P.S. Yes I have owned Land Rover products, new and old continuously since 1968.
Last edited by Lotz-A-Landies; 30th January 2008 at 10:29 PM.
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
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