Well, If I had my time again I would have gone a tdi or td5 and had the td5 chipped. Add some insulation and possibly an over drive at some point.
I wasn't a fan of the new model.
It doesn't look as good either any more. I got over the speed bulge quickly and would go for the older style now. And where the air vent flaps are missing looks stupid on the black one as it is really obvious that something is "missing".
And I have encountered a lot of people who don't wave from the new model.
Xav
Wow havent we managed to get off topic here.
What a crock of $hit. I for one am totally fed up with being stranded roadside by electronic failures. I can introduce to plenty of other people who have had similar experiences. I can introduce you to others who are totally fed up with dealers who are unable to diagnose or repair electrical/electronic problems except by the repalce item by item method.
We are talking outback/remote area vehicles here, not St. Margaret's cars (insert name of your city's expensive private school). Not Discos, Range Rovers, Freelanders, and similar vehicles aimed at a higher income city based buyer group, but real rough country working four wheel drives that will spend a considerable amount of their time well away from technical assistance. There are three rules to apply, simplicity, reliability, repairability. All electronic singing and dancing vehicles that just instantaneously stop working and won't restart and can not be diagnosed have no place in the outback. They will cause a tragedy sooner rather than later. What are you going to do in the Channel Country or Simpson when the main electronic control box fritzes? Call the NRMA whilst you break out the wine and canapes?
URSUSMAJOR
Outside the 4BD1, which would have never happened except for the Australian Army, it never happened before or since in any of the LR models.
Our only hope is to piggy-back on the desires of the US market where they do like big engines and Rover and later Land Rover have a history of catering to them. Just consider the NADA spec Series IIa 6 cyl with the Westlake head never offered outside North America and subsequently the Range Rover classic. The only reason we got the upgraded 3.9 litre V8 engine was once again for the introduction of the RR to the North American market and even then they were still only offering the 3.5 litre in Australia.
You won't find me on: faceplant; Scipe; Infragam; LumpedIn; ShapCnat or Twitting. I'm just not that interesting.
Cheers
Slunnie
~ Discovery II Td5 ~ Discovery 3dr V8 ~ Series IIa 6cyl ute ~ Series II V8 ute ~
i wish i could understand this small engine big engine argument
have never run a car for four zillion miles but my 2.4 defender feels as hot off the heels as my disco v8, ok its no sports car but who would want to drive a 2 ton wobbly car fast, so far on the trips i have done the def always seems to overtake anything with a jap badge on it when it comes to the hills.
may be i need to add a trailor to see what all the fuss is about.
with regards to electrics unfortunatly live with it get used to it spend the money on portable diagnostics its not going to change so if you want some thing electric free import a third world truck buy or buy old.
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