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Drake



Member Since: 04 Jan 2020
Location: Somerset
Posts: 18

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver
An Early L322 Joins the Club

Another old V8 Vogue rumbles into the FF car park with a first-time RR owner behind the wheel, hope it won't lower the tone parked next to all the impressive local metal.










As you can see, there's nothing special about this one. It's just an early L322 in a boring colour and a grey interior with the old-fashioned M62 up front... a commonplace used car. At least, I had thought so before trying to find one to buy last Summer...









Having moved from central London to start a new kind of life in the West Country I transformed overnight from a city driver who might not even start their car once a week to a car-dependent villager renovating an old house and needing to carry things, tow things, take people to restaurants and pubs, take dogs to beaches, nip up to London for work, nip down to Cornwall to check on my old parents and drive a teenage daughter and her 37 mates to remote parties. Not to mention thethe various fields, green lanes and flooded farm tracks that my new friends require me to navigate in order to visit their mad houses and barns, and all without looking like a farmer or a builder. I quickly realised I had become a Range Rover driver, but with no Range Rover.

I've always loved the classic Mk1's but I already have a 1969 Triumph as a cherished pet. I never warmed to the P38 (sorry) and there's no way I'd invest in an L405 to use as a work horse. So, an L322 - easy choice.

But not easy to find. As a bit of a purist, I was searching for my personal favourite, a low-mileage clean early petrol Vogue in factory trim and... they don't exist. Disregarding the completely worn-out, rotten and badly broken ones, virtually all the rest have been 'upgraded' with some random mix of grilles and vents, stick-on mirror and handle covers, clear rear lights, pretend face-lifts, dark tints, personal plates, dubious entertainment installations, massive wheels, lairy exhausts and things made of imitation chrome. Some poor cars have all of these at once - they remind me of pet dogs forced to wear a Christmas jumper.








Then this one popped up, advertised by a shoddy little back-yard dealership in a suburb of Coventry. They hadn't bothered washing it and the tyres were flat: it was an 80,000 miler from a deceased estate that they'd bought at auction but after looking at so many poor examples it pressed a button: it appeared to have a decent history, it was completely standard and had a fault-free MOT so I dragged myself all the way up to have a look. Under the dirt, the paint was ok, all it needed was cutting and polishing. The interior was really clean, undamaged and pleasant. The engine was a peach and the important gadgets worked. A test drive revealed nothing alarming - in fact, it was lovely. All the original accessories including the tow hitch were sitting unused in the boot (which is dry) and I couldn't find more than the odd bubble on the tailgate and wheel arches. It had had a recent radiator and front airbags. The young dealers wanted £4500 so I pointed out as many faults as I could find and walked away, waited a couple of hours and offered them £3000 on the phone if they'd wash it before I took it away.

It only took me a long weekend to clean it up properly: It's far from mint but perfectly respectable, amazingly useful and as lovely to drive as I had been led to believe by owners here and elsewhere. Its uncanny ability to make a driver feel so good will make it hard to give up. I've done around 8000 miles since June and enjoyed all of them, but it hasn't been entirely problem free...








The gearbox exploded in September. I had a reconditioned replacement, torque converter and oil cooler fitted by a local specialist for £2600 which I thought was a worthwhile gamble considering the rest of the car feels so good. I have a feeling that early unmolested examples will become a bit more sought-after in the years to come by people who, like myself, prefer originality - we'll see.

I've done a few jobs myself - lots of service parts, a couple of oil changes and a brake job. Being able to learn from other owners is invaluable - I've already made good use of the archives here, so thanks to all who've contributed in the past and perhaps I'll be able to add something useful in future.




Happy New Year and may you all have a lot of fun and no warning lights in 2020.




Post #539508 5th Jan 2020 5:56pm
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MR GLOVER



Member Since: 03 Jan 2015
Location: grimsby
Posts: 600

United Kingdom 2005 Range Rover Supercharged 4.2 SC V8 Buckingham Blue

I like it Thumbs Up Thumbs Up

Post #539511 5th Jan 2020 6:04pm
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Fatzo



Member Since: 11 Nov 2016
Location: Rigny
Posts: 82

France 2011 Range Rover Vogue TDV8 Ipanema Sand

Thumbs Up

Post #539515 5th Jan 2020 6:06pm
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stu1



Member Since: 06 Dec 2013
Location: UK
Posts: 276

United Kingdom 2007 Range Rover Supercharged 4.2 SC V8 Java Black

Great post, car looks excellent Thumbs Up

Post #539516 5th Jan 2020 6:08pm
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stan
Site Moderator


Member Since: 13 Jul 2010
Location: a moderate moderated moderator moderating moderately in moderation
Posts: 35272

United Kingdom 

its a beauty, you should be proud... Thumbs Up ... - .- -.




Y. O. L. O.
.

Post #539519 5th Jan 2020 6:24pm
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roblane65



Member Since: 01 May 2017
Location: Newcastle Upon Tyne.
Posts: 83

United Kingdom 

looks really nice, most wouldn't have sucked up the price of the box . I do agree when all is well they do seem to just be a nice place to be. Thumbs Up Range rover 4.2 SC 06MY.

Post #539522 5th Jan 2020 6:29pm
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DrRob



Member Since: 16 Apr 2015
Location: Petersfield, Hampshire
Posts: 4302

United Kingdom 2011 Range Rover Vogue SE TDV8 Buckingham Blue

Great write up Thumbs Up Bow down Gone to a good home: 2011 4.4 TDV8 Vogue SE Buckingham Blue with Ivory and clear glass = "Rory"
2025MY Defender D350 90 in Silicon Silver on coils
1974 Series 3 Lightweight = "Millie"
Many, many other Landies over the years
My preferred specialist: www.glenrands.co.uk
--------------------------------------------------

Post #539524 5th Jan 2020 6:43pm
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Highroller



Member Since: 18 Jul 2016
Location: Hampshire
Posts: 565

United Kingdom 2005 Range Rover Vogue SE 4.4 V8 Java Black

Looks like a nice example Thumbs Up

Post #539531 5th Jan 2020 7:19pm
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fanders



Member Since: 10 Jul 2013
Location: Hants, UK
Posts: 313

United Kingdom 2009 Range Rover Autobiography 4.2 SC V8 Buckingham Blue

A nice Rangie, we look forward to hearing about your adventures with it!

fanders Thumbs Up

Post #539537 5th Jan 2020 7:36pm
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DrF



Member Since: 30 Jun 2014
Location: South East
Posts: 1387

United Kingdom 2013 Range Rover SVAutobiography 5.0 SC V8 Orkney Grey

Nice example, V8 as well proper example, keep it original. I had a brand new one of these on an 04 plate in V8 petrol with Blue Leather and it was a great car. Enjoy it. Thumbs Up Thumbs Up

Post #539544 5th Jan 2020 8:21pm
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Drake



Member Since: 04 Jan 2020
Location: Somerset
Posts: 18

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

Well, this is a friendly place - many thanks to you all for your kind replies. You have some pretty fabulous cars between you, that's for sure, and no doubt a massive amount of combined knowledge. Looking forward to posting more, I'll be sure to add pictures when anything 'interesting' happens (good or bad).

Tomorrow the RR is doing load-carrying duty - I started a side business last year buying and selling antiques and so far it's carried all kinds of mad loads, from a taxidermy tiger to a roof-high collection of 1960's Airfix kits - it even swallowed a Chesterfield sofa before Christmas. The nice thing is, it never feels like you're working when you drive any Range Rover...

Thanks again





Post #539545 5th Jan 2020 8:36pm
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TDV8_Tommy



Member Since: 20 Feb 2019
Location: Pinoso, Valencia
Posts: 397

Spain 2012 Range Rover Westminster TDV8 Baltic Blue

Although I have a 2012 run-out Westie...I do have a soft spot for the 2002 year cars. There is just something about them, stylistically. Possibly the then ground-breaking design in its first iteration, the flat front bumper, those rear lights... I could go on 😁😁

I used to work next door to TMS Land Rover in Melton Mowbray at the time the L322 was launched. I remember very vividly two black L322s been hurriedly driven across the industrial estate to their holding compound late one afternoon at dusk. Hurriedly driven so no one saw them pre-launch. I did... 2012 4.4 TDV8 Westminster - Baltic Blue, Jet interior
1997 P38 2.5 DSE auto & 1998 P38 2.5 DT Manual
1988 Vogue 3.5 EFI - Manual, gone.
2004 Volvo C70 2.0T convertible, had since new.
2007 Mazda MX-5 2.0 Sport Roadster/Coupé, had since new.
2024 Mini Cooper S cabrio, JCW kit, 2.0, DCT auto

Post #539551 5th Jan 2020 9:01pm
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ColinG



Member Since: 12 Jul 2015
Location: Scotland
Posts: 6

United Kingdom 2008 Range Rover Vogue 4.2 SC V8 Bonatti Grey

Very nice looking motor. MY 08 L322 4.2 Supercharged, Grey with Black leather, 85k

Post #539552 5th Jan 2020 9:04pm
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TomV8



Member Since: 25 Sep 2017
Location: Yorkshire
Posts: 107

United Kingdom 2004 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Bonatti Grey

Lovely write up and fantastic Range Rover Drake.

A lot of your thoughts chime with my own. Whilst one of the great things about Range Rovers is that they are such a broad church and there is a lot of enthusiasm for all sorts of different styles and enhancements, like you, I go weak at the knees for a factory spec machine. Particularly when it is a teenager and still factory spec. A few years ago Pistonheads ran a “Save a Scooby” campaign saying that everyone with petrol in their veins should buy an unmolested 1990s Impreza because they are disappearing. They encouraged people to find £2,000 and buy a Scooby to save it. I think there is a parallel with the early L322s. I looked for ages to find one that was genuinely fsh and not modified.

I ended up compromising and getting one with high miles, but the right spec and every service invoice in the file. I was also tickled to find out that mine was supplied new by a dealer just round the corner from my work in 2004. So whilst I was sat working, the first owner was 300 yards away driving it out the showroom. To that person - thank you for spec’ing it as you did and for running it in!

Great that you’ve got yours and you are using it too. Very best of luck with it. 2004 L322 4.4 V8 Vogue Bonatti Grey
(205,500 miles and counting.......)

Post #539559 5th Jan 2020 9:51pm
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Drake



Member Since: 04 Jan 2020
Location: Somerset
Posts: 18

United Kingdom 2003 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

Tom - thanks for that.

High mileage isn't an issue if the car's been looked after and the interior hasn't suffered. I've had low-miles cars before with no end of problems because they had been left sitting for long periods or been neglected as second cars, issues that a regularly used and properly maintained example won't suffer from. I would have gone for an example like yours but again, a car with a big service history is also tricky to find.

Bonatti Grey is my favourite paint for a Mk3, it's a perfect mid-tone with a really classy, ageless look. While all the colours are handsome, the darkest colours rob the car of the 'floating roof' 2-tone effect the designers intended with the black pillars, a classic Range-Rover design cue that I really like. Silver's OK, no-one hates it but I don't think it would be anyone's first choice either...

Cheers

Post #539563 5th Jan 2020 11:21pm
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