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Thread: JD Power - LR Still at the bottom of the pile for reliability

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Brisbane West
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    Admiral, I agree to an extent. In the past I have experienced delays with many brands including BMW but a K frame is only taken out with heavy front end impacts, unlike windscreens. A delay of 2 weeks for a windscreen is like a delay for 2 weeks for a headlight and is just not on.

    Cheers

  2. #12
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    Oct 2009
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    Gladstone
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    Quote Originally Posted by RoverLander View Post

    I had reason to need a new windscreen last week (no i really dont want to discuss why !@##) and the news from LR was that they wouldn't have one for 2 weeks.... and that is in metropolitan Sydney! I doubt that would have happened with the LC100 I previously owned.
    I had to do a screen here in Brisbane a few weeks ago. No delay at all on the OEM class.

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
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    Cloncurry NWQ
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    In early June we had the drivers window on our work L/Cruiser ute was vandalised & shattered.
    6 weeks to get a replacement to Doomadgee.
    Then they sent a window that was for a car without a quarter glass so it didn't fit & had to go back. Still waiting for the new window.
    The irony of all this? The local mechanic pulled a window out of a '93 troopie & put that in, fit's perfectly but because of lease arrangements he can't get paid for doing that & still has to install the new window, should it ever arrive, if he wants to get paid.
    So much for the often mentioned reason for buying a Toyota over a Land Rover, that parts & service are far better for a L/C in remote areas.
    Load of cr^p!
    That same night a staff members Jeep Cherokee had all bar 1 of it's windows smashed. It is still in Mt Isa waiting on a rear window to arrive from the USofA 7 weeks latter.
    Bloody glad I left the D3 at home that night.
    Jonesfam

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
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    Fremantle WA or Erbil, Iraq (?!)
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    It seems that "inventory" is a 4 letter word these days, and that applies to more than just vehicles. Probably as a result of the so-called global financial crisis, no one keeps inventory if they can possibly avoid it. Same thing happens for spare parts for natural gas plants as for D4's as for Corolla's (daughter had 4 week wait for a radiator bracket). Therefore I conclude that duration of a repair is just a problem for everything these days.

    I'd be interested to know exactly what JD Powers defines as "maintenance". For example my radio stopped working on the D4 and it was fixed by a software update - took 4 hours from when it occured until the dealer returned it to me by the way. Is a radio not working given the same weight by JD Powers as, say, a crankshaft failure? Having had a D3 and now a D4 it strikes me that there are a lot of "niggly" things that go wrong but only rarely is it something really serious (in my case the EPB dragged and caused a bit of a fire).

    I understand that most so-called "maintenance" on new vehicles involves checking and updating electronics more than it involves premature failure of something mechanical. If this in indeed true, than just getting one of the black boxes which can interrogate, reset faults, and change values in the computer would probably greatly reduce the risk of being stranded. If I lived in a remote location (okay, never mind Perth being the most remote capital city) then getting some working knowledge of the electronics and having a few tools would significantly reduce the risk of failure in the middle of nowhere. At least these days we are no longer having to forever clean and adjust contacts in the distributor cap!

  5. #15
    Join Date
    May 2010
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    Brisbane, QLD, Australia
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    I knew people that had D1s and D2s.....and I was super impressed with their off-road prowess and all round appeal. It was probably 50/50 on the reliability stakes for these vehicles with some friends having no issues and others needing some really big fixes......and often.

    This and the general Discovery reputation, prevented me from buying one.....I didn't even know that Defenders were having issues, as I didn't know anybody that owned one and assumed from the military ones I'd been around that they were pretty good......but were broken often due to usage rather than inherent reliability problems.

    I tried to research the reliabilty of the D3 as I'd heard some good things. It was an almost impossible task. There are so many emotive reactions to LRs, that I couldn't wade through the fact and fiction. As has been noted, even official reviews and surveys are extremely subjective.

    I finally drew the conclusion (rightly or wrongly) that the D3 was significantly better and that all makes can have issue. After reading articles on this site....when the D4 had just started hitting the street, I still couldn't make my mind up. What actually swayed me was the fact that so many people on this site own or have owned so many LRs. I figured "surely there can't be that many people that are out of their freakin minds"....LOL

    So...rightly or wrongly...I went ahead and shelled out 90K for a D4. It's almost ten months old now and has had a few niggly issues, mainly light fittings, that I recon were were broken on assembly....and one intermittent suspension failure (which did really **** me off).

    Way, way back, I got the light fittings and a compressor replaced.....since then, all good......and I hope it stays that way.

    I love my car.....

  6. #16
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
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    Edmonton Alberta Canada
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    Parts supply better than BMW

    So far I have been lucky regarding parts availability. Fortunately, I have not needed too much other than normal maintenance stuff.

    A couple of months back, the air compressor quit and perhaps by luck, the dealer had one in stock so I was in and out in a morning. The only real inconvenience was to my wallet.

    I asked the dealer why they seemed to have parts and he said that they kept a pretty good stock of stuff on their own shelves as they knew pretty much what would fail. I think it also had something to do with getting parts out of Eastern Canada, (the main LR warehouse), is not that easy, so they kept a more than normal amount of stuff around in their own inventory - what a concept! The reason I mentioned BMW, is that the service advisor used to work at a local BMW dealer. He finds working at Land Rover much more pleasant as he does not have to make as many excuses up re "waiting for parts".

    About the only "parts" I am still waiting for are W3W indicator bulbs. The dealer has a stock of bags that say W3W, but the bulbs within are W5W bulbs. It appears that the Land Rover "bagging" department got their bins mixed up and packaged W5W bulbs as W3W bulbs. This may be a world wide problem I think as the bulbs seem to be sourced from Yugoslavia.

    Mixing these bulbs up matters, at least here in North America, as if you insert W5M bulbs in the amber side marker locations of your headlight assemblies, the additional heat of the W5W bulbs melts the bulbs into the plastic and the bulbs etc cannot be removed. The bulbs are there forever. Guess how I discovered this?

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