Id leave some room for some maintenance. I spent a couple of grand replacing worn items in 18 months (doing some of that work myself), and i reckon ive had a good run. That doesnt include a $600 gearbox service (theyre usually about $900) or $500 to free up the EPB when it died. If you need new front LCA bushes and wheel bearings (both things ive done at 165k km), and you cant do it yourself, you're looking at up to $2.5k (cost me about $750 for parts)
The only thing that worried me about higher mileage cars was the gearbox. If its serviced then anything up to 200k km would be ok. (Its about $7k for a gearbox rebuild) Just watch out for the diesels approaching 7 years or 168k km as thats the big $2.5k timing belt service.
Theres also some later d3s and early d4s with gearbox stator bushing issues which cause premature failure of the gearbox. You can google VINs to see affected vehicles.
Lots to think about!
MY08 TDV6 SE D3- permagrin ooh yeah
2004 Jayco Freedom tin tent
1998 Triumph Daytona T595
1974 VW Kombi bus
1958 Holden FC special sedan
those arms being the length of a grown adult, but thin as a 4 year old, with the strength of a gorilla...
2010 TDV6 3.0L Discovery 4 SE remapped to RRS output, Alaska White, GME XRS-330c, IIDTool BT, Dual Battery, Apple CarPlay, OEM Retrofitted: Cornering lights, Door card lights, Power + Heated Seats, Logic 7 audio
If you've done all your own work for the past 30 years then the timing belt shouldnt raise to many issues for you. The main front timing belt isnt to hard, its the HP fuel pump that's fiddly - but its doable. I took 2 days to do both but I also done the oil pump housing and half the time was spent trying to get the starter out to lock the motor. Bloody thing only comes out one way
Shane
2005 D3 TDV6 loaded to the brim with 4 kids!
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/members-rides/220914-too-many-defender-write-ups-here-time-d3.html
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						SubscriberBoth cars I've been looking at (a D3 and a D4) have triple sun-roofs - one dealer said I couldn't take that car off-road because the sun-roofs would shatter due to body flex. I've searched on this site, and googled generally, and I can't see much discussion of that happening. And, given that the D3 and D4 are both monocoque, I wouldn't've thought that there would be much flex anyway - they're not Unimogs, where the ladder frame chassis is (supposedly) designed to twist.
Was he trying to sell you a different car, one he'd had longer? Only reason I can think of for him saying something like that. LRs have had sunroofs foe decades. D1 and 2 often had two of them.
Given the car's oft stated purpose as an off roader, if sunroofs were shattering LR would have been inundated with warranty claims, IMO.
JayTee
Nullus Anxietus
Cancer is gender blind.
2000 D2 TD5 Auto: Tins
1994 D1 300TDi Manual: Dave
1980 SIII Petrol Tray: Doris
OKApotamus #74
Nanocom, D2 TD5 only.
What a load of rubbish he has told you. This video is pretty good in explaining why.
Snowy's Discovery 3 axle-twister @ Eastwell Manor by '4x4 Solutions' - YouTube
One of the reasons these things are so heavy is they effectively have two chassis, for huge strength. Like he says in the video, the whole roof could be made of glass and it wouldn't break.
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