Has McGovern ever left his Park Lane pad and come to Australia?, Africa? The real market for Defender? Or has he just been driving Route 66? in his dreams.
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Has McGovern ever left his Park Lane pad and come to Australia?, Africa? The real market for Defender? Or has he just been driving Route 66? in his dreams.
You mean leading edge design in terms of how it looks? I think I can handle it being quite modern in appearance, if it has the right Defender design cues and looks tough. The graphic from the LA motorshow presentation gives me hope. I just can’t fathom why they’re using their aluminium monocoque platform, other than to amortise cost. It doesn’t differentiate the new Defender in any meaningful way from everything else in their range. They can say what they want about the Discovery and Range Rover lines being different, but at this point everything’s starting to blur into one.
I understand that designing a new platform is extremely expensive, even something as relatively low-tech as a ladder frame, but you’d think LR themselves, or even parent Tata would pull out the stops when replacing one of the most iconic vehicles ever made.
I’m just disappointed that after all the rumours about needing a properly utilitarian dual cab in the range, steel sub frames with live axles, etc. it’s just going to be another flavour of the same thing. If it’s a cut-down RR Sport in khakis, what’s the point?
Perhaps worth reminding everyone that in the early 1980s many, if not most, existing and potential potential Landrover buyers were absolutely certain that coil springs were totally unsuited to utility vehicles, and Leyland had written the end of Landrover by using Rangerover technology on the Landrover!
It can be a leading edge design, as well as super robust and hose-out. If it's not, it will be just another luxurious Disco/Rangey clone.
100% agree John.
I have told this a few times, about a conversation with Mal Storey, who is a bit of an authority and reckoned the drive train on any Range Rover or 110 after the LT95, and certainly post Salisbury or proper drive flanges was rubbish and not worth a pinch.
While I agree with both your post and John's, it is also worth remembering that the various versions of what became known as the Defender have NEVER crossed over into either the Discovery or Range Rover worlds. I think the fears being expressed in the various threads regarding the new Defender is that that will no longer be the case, and the Defender will no longer be the Heart and Soul. I hope we are wrong.
You have got to be kidding.....the heart of Land Rover, since it's conception, has been without any doubt, the Discovery.
The soul of Land Rover since its conception , has been Range Rover.