Home > General (L405) > 2018 PHEV |
|
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
Looks like we have similar issues, bizarrely in Reading!! Mine has now been with Lancaster LR in Reading for a week following the troubles experienced last week as per my previous post. Was due back today after an update from them suggested nothing found other than lots of comms error messages. They were also doing some recall work (left hand steering wheel buttons inc) but then declared vehicle not ready. I suspect issues found when road testing. Due an update tomorrow. If no progress then onto LR assistance who can take back the disco sport loaner and provide something more suitable. |
||
20th Aug 2018 7:58pm |
|
Amazing Member Since: 17 Jun 2015 Location: China Posts: 61 |
Land rover are still in a world of Guy Martins and Fred Dibnahs when the world has moved on to Steve Jobs' and Fabrice Bellards.
|
||
21st Aug 2018 3:51am |
|
Philip Member Since: 05 Jan 2010 Location: UK Posts: 2564 |
I find the quality control (or, perhaps, just plain functionality) issues fascinating - the electrical and electronic systems and components come from the same global marketplace and third-party suppliers which every other manufacturer selects from, but something goes awry - is it scrimping on hardware specification (is that even worth the savings on processors, memory etc?), or is the software just poorly-written and poorly-tested?
|
||
21st Aug 2018 10:31am |
|
CUE99T Member Since: 02 Oct 2011 Location: Glasgow Posts: 779 |
I think they need better developers!!!!
|
||
23rd Aug 2018 9:55am |
|
CSK Member Since: 15 Oct 2010 Location: St Tropez Posts: 750 |
I think with JLR you need to keep it simple. Stick to the Supercharged petrol, all in all it won't be much less economical than the PHEV and way more reliable. |
||
23rd Aug 2018 3:00pm |
|
CS Member Since: 14 Apr 2015 Location: Edinburgh Posts: 1373 |
Only Range Rovers since 1988 |
||
23rd Aug 2018 5:08pm |
|
DrF Member Since: 30 Jun 2014 Location: South East Posts: 1386 |
Couldn't agree more.
|
||
23rd Aug 2018 7:49pm |
|
Gt3gooner Member Since: 17 Jan 2018 Location: Oxon Posts: 42 |
It’s not just about the running cost guys. Wake up and smell the BiK coffee!! JLR have the right idea, but can’t execute at the moment. Massive opportunity to sway exec company car drivers who can get into a range as cheap as a diesel 5 series. But it’s got to work. £95k down (in theory) 3 weeks on the road followed by 2 week’s and counting at the dealers awaiting a sparky to sort out the hybrid failure. Not good enough. |
||
23rd Aug 2018 8:37pm |
|
CUE99T Member Since: 02 Oct 2011 Location: Glasgow Posts: 779 |
Gt3gooner.....you are so right......but that unreliability is the bit I really don't want to face. As you say 95k is a shed load of cash for such an experience.......I'm totally gutted for you as not only is it costing you hassle, it's taking the shine of a nice new car.
|
||
24th Aug 2018 9:29am |
|
CSK Member Since: 15 Oct 2010 Location: St Tropez Posts: 750 |
Fuel cost is quite reasonable, I managed 23 MPG (around 12.5 l/100 km) on a long trip. |
||
25th Aug 2018 4:24pm |
|
Autobiography Member Since: 10 May 2011 Location: UK Posts: 922 |
I’m so glad I went for the SVA-D after 7 years of diesel Range Rovers.
|
||
26th Aug 2018 7:09am |
|
CSK Member Since: 15 Oct 2010 Location: St Tropez Posts: 750 |
How is the AB Dynamic comfortwise compared to the standard Supercharged? Do you loose on comfort what you gain in dynamics (I think that was the case with the first iteration of the Dynamics model (pre-2018)?
|
||
26th Aug 2018 8:59am |
|
Tim in Scotland Member Since: 25 Mar 2007 Location: Somewhere between here and there, if not then I'm all at sea or at home in Scotland Posts: 2181 |
Sorry to read all the woes with FFRR PHEV’s here. This year I decided not to renew my SDv6 HSE Dynamic RRS with the PHEV version as it was taking way too long to come to market and then there were quality issues but the price was like WOW so much. I couldn’t bring myself to buy an ugly Mitsubishi PHEV or a Prius so I had a 4 day test drive in a MiNi Countryman Cooper S E All4 PHEV and was really impressed. Having owned Land Rover products for the last 25 years it was a hard decision not to be buying another new one but in November 2017 I placed an order for a £32,000 Mini Countryman. It was a prolonged build wait, there was a Price increase, there was a re-evaluation of the emissions from the 1.5lt Turbo triple cylinder petrol engine that meant that the VED rose from £10 pa to £140 and then there was a spec change followed by a glitch in BMW’s ordering system where they wiped out all the placed orders S the option pack codes changed, delivery went from March to April to May to end of June and in early June I was in the dealership doing some paperwork when a transporter pulled up outside the showroom and the sales man said “ oh look there is a similar spec car to yours, I don’t recall there being another one on order, let’s go and look” IT was my car delivered 24 days earlier than predicted at the last forecast! Then came the biggest surprise - because the emissions had been re-rated and the price of mine including all the options had leapt to over £40,000 BMW held the contracted price and paid the Luxury Car Tax for the first 5 years too. It is no Range Rover or RRS but it Is almost impossible to tell when the little petrol engine is driving the front wheels as there is no rev counter, it is sooooo quiet and smooth - I was expecting a 3 cylinder engine to be a bit shakey like a diesel. The car starts in EV mode by default and has a claimed 26 miles EV Range (more like 18 in real life driving) and the change over EV to polluter is seemless and smooth. I haven’t Had any reason whatsoever to return to the dealership as everything is so well put together and just works. I do have one niggle though with the tech.......... and I believe the Land Rover PHEV’s have the same issue - why when the car is in EV mode does it continue to calculate MPG, surely in this day and age of sophisticated electronics an MPG computer can be made to detect when the car is running in EV mode and stop calculating MPG and switch to kWhr/km or whatever and then back when the petrol engine cuts back in. It mystifies me. According to the trip computer my 1.5ltr triple claims it is doing 201mpg......... in reality I have used it in EV mode for more than 90% of my motoring and filled its tiny 35 litre petrol tank twice now, but in real life motoring I get around 30mpg at 70-80mph on the M9 driving to Edinburgh and arrive with a fully charged HV battery to drive into town in EV mode. I charge at home from my solar array on the FIT or in off peak for peanuts. I’m delighted with the car and so far it has saved me a fortune over running the RRS. What really amazes me is how good the ride is, easily up to air-spring riding RRS in Dynamic mode and I haven’t had such an accelerative car since I owned a TVR in the early 1980’s! The Countryman PHEV is the fastest Mini of them all as it uses both
|
||
20th Sep 2018 4:50pm |
|
ilard Member Since: 21 Oct 2012 Location: London Posts: 708 |
Tim’s got 15000 posts on the rrsport forum and it feels like 14999 of them have been about his wee plug-in shopping cart! |
||
21st Sep 2018 7:37pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis