The 2a was 1961-71; I see some of these still in use round here, but I do not see any Landcruisers of similar age - you do see a few from the late 1970s, by which time Toyota had fixed a lot of the faults.
But it is worth noting that in the sixties, Landrovers probably sold a lot more than Toyota did - the real takeover of the market was not until seventies, so there may simply have been more Landrovers to start with in the sixties and more Landcruisers in the seventies.
As far as my memory goes the reasons for the takeover of the market by Toyota (and to a lesser extent Nissan) were (no particular order):-
1.More power giving a higher speed on the road. This appealed to individual buyers, but not fleet owners.
2. As Leyland's mass market products failed, so did their dealer network and distribution system.
3. Toyota responded more rapidly to owner experience - Rover was good at this in the fifties, but Leyland was quite unresponsive.
4. From 1948 to the early seventies, Rover was unable to meet demand for Landrovers. This meant that Landrover quantities were rationed to countries such as Australia, leading to long delivery times particularly when large batches were sold, for example to the army. This is how Thiess first got into importing Landcruisers - he could not buy Landrovers at the time.
5. As the "standard" four wheel drive changed in the late sixties from something similar to the original Jeep (e.g. FJ40, LR 88) to a trayback ute, the FJ45 with a 121" wheelbase had a big advantage over the Landrover's 109" wheelbase.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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