Home > General > advice on petrol range rover's 4.2/5.0 |
|
|
paulbrown22 Member Since: 23 Dec 2017 Location: London/Poole Posts: 352 |
The 4.2 S/C seems to have a fairly bulletproof reputation and is plenty fast enough, but the newest examples will be ~10 years old now. The cabin, whilst still very luxurious, also looks a bit more dated in comparison, suspension not as good, and doesn't have various toys the 2009+ L322's got.
|
||
28th Dec 2018 11:27am |
|
MPx Member Since: 29 Jul 2011 Location: South Somerset Posts: 585 |
For me there are pluses and minuses for both (?) variants. There are more variants of course - the model 10-12 5.0 is a step on from the first 5.0s; the 2007 on 4.2 is nicer to be in that pre 2007 4.2, etc. But if budget is a major concern, then I'd suggest finding the best late 4.2 you can and keep the rest of your money ready to fix anything that crops up (mine was bullet proof up to when I sold it at 120k+). You'll get a 5.0 for £17k but you wont get one of the best 5.0s for £17k. Both models have their advantages - but it depends what you value personally. eg:
|
||
28th Dec 2018 2:57pm |
|
the shreksta Member Since: 04 Oct 2015 Location: hinckley Posts: 7 |
hi and thanks for the replies
|
||
28th Dec 2018 6:22pm |
|
Lester Burnham Member Since: 12 Sep 2018 Location: North Posts: 116 |
CAn you elaborate on that please as I fancy a 5.0 and they all seem to be 2009s..... |
||
28th Dec 2018 6:53pm |
|
Andy B Member Since: 03 Apr 2012 Location: West Malling Posts: 1223 |
From experience, the 5.0 S/C is a big leap forward from the 4.2 S/C. Despite a few problems they are a lot more reliable and the performance increase is noticeable. PM me if you would like more details
|
||
28th Dec 2018 10:10pm |
|
MPx Member Since: 29 Jul 2011 Location: South Somerset Posts: 585 |
There's others who will have a more authoritative knowledge of the spec changes of the 10-12 cars but the most obvious are the dash and controls - TFT screens rather than analogue dials which gives a much more modern feel to the car. Not sure which were std and which extras, but there's also cooled as well as heated rear seats, reclining rear seats, adaptive cruise, nicer leather, bigger wing mirrors, better headlining, different wheels, different grill, and some like mine had a different body kit below the bumper level. But no Rear Seat Entertainment. The engine was the same 503BHP - it didn't go to 510 and above until the L405 so its mostly cosmetic, but in my view does make a difference. On one of Andy's points...my judgement from the various threads on here is that there is a greater consensus about the 4.2 being the most reliable ....but that's not saying that the 5 is bad. There is no doubt that the 5.0 is a much faster car so if that's the critical factor there's only one choice. But if you take into consideration that its still not a sports car, not really trackable, and a bit of a handful if you try to use the performance in any corners then other priorities may surface. The 5.0 is harder to drive quickly smoothly - still possible obviously just takes more skill. The 4.2, while slower, is still quick for a barge... Having said that...I'm likely to be looking for an SVR next time - as I still believe you can never have too much power! Mike - MPx 2017 5.0 V8 Supercharged SVAutobigraphy Dynamic SVO Palette Grey (2021-...) 2012 5.0 V8 Supercharged Autoboigraphy Orkney Grey (2017-2021) 2007 4.2 V8 Supercharged Vogue SE Tonga Green (2012-2017) 2002 4.4 V8 Vogue Bonnatti Grey (2008-2012) |
||
28th Dec 2018 11:04pm |
|
alanm_3 Member Since: 19 Feb 2011 Location: my House, unless I’m not at home, in which case I’m somewhere else. Posts: 6729 |
Even the earliest 5.0 cars have the TFT dash (since they appeared at the same time as the facelifted 3.6 models that got this), so there should be no difference between an earlier and later car as far as the inside is concerned. Got - 2017 SDV8 Autobiography in Loire Blue
|
||
29th Dec 2018 12:46am |
|
the shreksta Member Since: 04 Oct 2015 Location: hinckley Posts: 7 |
does anybody know if the approved used warranty would cover the failing of a timing chain tensioner?
|
||
29th Dec 2018 11:02am |
|
Lyonhead Member Since: 05 Aug 2017 Location: Cardiff Posts: 349 |
MPx, I noticed you saying...Having said that...I'm likely to be looking for an SVR next time - as I still believe you can never have too much power!
|
||
29th Dec 2018 11:23am |
|
MPx Member Since: 29 Jul 2011 Location: South Somerset Posts: 585 |
Yes, I agree...and it may be what stops me Lyonhead...but there's a £50k+ premium on SVA vs SVR and piggy bank realities may force the choice to be SVR or another SC - will have to wait to see just how ruinous the depreciation turns out to be. From my perspective I'm hoping it will be spectacular, with the effects of fuel pricing and the EV brigade seeing s/h prices tumble and I'll pick up an SVA 3 or 4 years old for a song. Mike - MPx
|
||
29th Dec 2018 11:40pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis