Home > My Range Rover > Returning to the fold and a few questions |
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mjdronfield Member Since: 04 Nov 2011 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 7793 |
Any common issues the 4.4 has will not leave you needing a new engine. The same can’t be said of the 3.6. I went TD6 to 4.4 TDV8 for that reason. The 8 speed gearbox is ace. Mines not had the drain mod done and it doesn’t smoke.... others will have had 3.6’s for years and not had issues, but I didn’t want the worry.
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12th Jun 2020 10:15pm |
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AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
I had a relatively short time in the land of Rangie ownership, a 4.4 TDV8. I had to have the drain mod done, the smoking was horrendous after a spell of gentle driving, once done it was superb, no smoke at all. During my 18 months - Suspension Airbag, Compressor, Aux Belt Tensioner, Front Disks and pads, Front wishbones. It's a lovely place to be, great way to travel but such an annoying vehicle, the quality control and design from JLR is dreadful. A car that cade wade with brake pipes that corrode, fastening that rust, electric handbrake module conveniently located on top of the subframe - the whole sub frame needs to be removed to gain access to it.
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13th Jun 2020 5:46am |
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DrRob Member Since: 16 Apr 2015 Location: Petersfield, Hampshire Posts: 4302 |
4.4 and check for all the usual oil leaks and 007 smoke exhaust cloud on booting it.
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13th Jun 2020 7:26am |
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jackie-o Member Since: 15 Jun 2018 Location: Sweden Posts: 226 |
Go 4.4 and budget to spend 5k in the first 12 months to have everything sorted RR Vogue 4.4 TDV8 - 11
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13th Jun 2020 9:59am |
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Brian Considine Member Since: 15 Apr 2019 Location: Garlinge Posts: 428 |
Could the amount of recycled steel in "new" steel thesedays be a factor ? Also a factor may be that vehicles are more or less designed for a maximum service life of around ten years ? 2003 Range Rover Vogue TD6 |
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13th Jun 2020 10:58am |
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mjdronfield Member Since: 04 Nov 2011 Location: Derbyshire Posts: 7793 |
I think that would probably be the reason then. I bought mine at 4 years old, and top tailgate had already had to be painted.....
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13th Jun 2020 11:45am |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
Thanks all for the input; I must admit that newer cars frustrate me somewhat as they are clearly built with the idea that the manufacture will finance for the first owner for three years, then sell it as 'approved used' for another three years and then punt into an auction with the expectation that at ten years old it'll be borderline scrap. The amount of plastics on modern cars don't help as they allow so much mud to sit and then rust to fester. No matter what I buy will be getting all the plastics stripped off, properly cleaned and then fully undersealed.
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13th Jun 2020 5:47pm |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
Well it's funny how things go full circle. I never went for the FFRR, despite looking at a few. And every time I see one, I regret my choice. The reality is that I don't need a jacked up off roader for 99% of my driving, and so I decided to be sensible and go for a BMW 335d X Drive estate as it covered the winter ability mostly. They also do 40mpg average no matter how you drive them and are a lot more fun on country roads than a big truck is. However, and bearing in mind I got this car at 30k (now on 60k);
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25th Nov 2022 11:59pm |
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AJGalaxy2012 Member Since: 11 Jun 2018 Location: Gainsborough Posts: 1464 |
I had a Touareg before my L322, the Touareg is way ahead of the L322 in the corrosion and reliability stakes. I put 200,000 miles on the Touareg with not a single failure, the underside had no rust whatsoever and the bodywork likewise. The 3 litre V6 was a good motor, sounded nice and pulled by 2000kg caravan with no issues.
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26th Nov 2022 6:08am |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3201 |
All these cars are >10 years old now so it’s just a case of buying the best particular example and there is no ‘all things being equal’ scenario. All these cars are also now ‘cheap’ to buy so just price up the common fail items on each and work out if you have the budget to run one. 2012 TDV8 Vogue (L322) |
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26th Nov 2022 8:19am |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
That was the bit I was concerned about, and what swayed me away from it at the last minute; the borkage factor (i.e likelihood of borkage vs the cost of borkage). The thing is though, most modern-ish stuff has a lack of reliability and a high cost of repair, and the newest stuff is even more difficult to do anything on. And with the BMW I'm just fed up of it's fragility, no matter what the fun level is. Sadly for me the previous L322 simply made me want another, rather than successfully scratching the itch.
Yep, they're definitely getting to the point where people are likely to buy them for peanuts and run them on a button budget. It was the same with Imprezas; when they stopped being a bit more pricey to buy you suddenly saw the number of owners shooting up and the standard of what was for sale shooting down. I've not got a problem to run one, other than an engine catastrophically letting go but how many people do have the 10k needed just sat there? I could manage, I just wouldn't want to! I know from my previous TD6 that rust is a problem on all of them, so I'll be very fussy with hunting for stuff and I've also not got any issue spending a weekend stripping off all the plastics and under trays and cleaning up any rust, coating with epoxy and then soak all the cavities in oil/wax etc. To me it's still likely to be a less frustrating experience than dealing with BMW... It's frustrating that the perfect car doesn't exist; if I could go and buy a new mk1 Frontera or Isuzu Trooper I would; basic mechanicals and generally reliable. Sadly even basic SUV/4WD stuff now is over-complex, so if you're going to have unreliability you may as well have something you actually like, IMO. I mean the 2.0l pickups are gutless and end up with issues later in life, and in the case of the Ford Ranger the 3.0 has major issues, the Amarok is just stupid money, the older Navaras have more corrosion problems than an eightees Fiat and the later ones the same issue of being expensive and impractical (as they all are). Every time, borkage factor aside, I come back to the RR as the 'sensible' option for what I'm after. I'm certainly not going to rush into changing but it looks like the option I'm most likely to go for as I just can't find anything else that ticks the boxes. And I'm not spending £15-20k to drive around in a sodding X-Trail/CRV etc. |
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27th Nov 2022 8:27pm |
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JayGee Member Since: 27 Jul 2021 Location: London Posts: 3201 |
I've calculated all the costs and potential costs of my L322 vs other cars and in the long term it 's but what I can't put in the spreadsheet is the value of what it feels like to be driving one, soaking up the miles in absolute comfort and arriving at a destination after a long drive less tired than when I set out.
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27th Nov 2022 9:10pm |
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Dolphinboy Member Since: 07 Dec 2009 Location: Bristol Posts: 3137 |
@OP
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27th Nov 2022 10:19pm |
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Ennoch Member Since: 26 Dec 2015 Location: Scotland Posts: 109 |
Spreadsheets are a painful way of reminding you of things you can't change! I should know, I've got one for the Impreza over the last ten years All I'll say is that I'm very glad I wasn't paying labour on top of the parts prices... What you describe on the FFRR is exactly why I'm wanting to go back to one; the BMW is a great pusher but not a great cruiser as you're too low for good vis in bad conditions (although it can cope very well with snow etc) and it's not exactly impervious to damage from poor road surfaces. That's my view with the late 4.4's too. Yes, I could go for a 3.6 but they've got the turbo issues and the fuel isn't so good on them, and since I was looking before there's less of a premium for the later engine too. Plus the ZF8 is a mighty gearbox. I know of a few things the 4.4 is susceptible to, like the oil drain mod (but then if it was an issue I would assume most would be resolved by now?), and the alternator and starter motor. But they do seem to have a lot less issues than the earlier ones, particularly once the worst of the BMW tech was ditched. I've also got a full ZF service kit for the box too having got one but not yet got around to doing it on the Beemer.
Cheers, the N57 is actually a pretty indestructible engine in the main, it seems to be the police (lots of time idling followed by hard thrashing) and EGR issues that cause their demise in the main. I've got the pukka BMW warranty on mine anyway so I'm not too worried about that sort of thing anyway, and it's just had it's EGR recall to replace the previously recalled EGR valve. The £70 p/m warranty has definitely proved its worth so far, but then again I'd have probably gone for ACS coilovers rather than replace the adaptive with like for like, and the steering rack would have been repaired rather than replaced (£100 part vs £3000 part) and the same for the TC which you can get refurbed for less than £500. It's all a balancing act. I take it the inlet manifold is a plastic part, or is it something else which fails on them? I like the look of Hayland's one but I'm planning to keep long term at 15-20k per year so would rather go for the lower miles end of the spectrum, ideally. I'm also likely to wait until after Christmas now as I still need to get rid of the Beemer and sort a few other things out too, but yeah, I'd rather get a well looked after one that maybe needs a few little bits sorting out rather than a potential one owner car that just hasn't been cared for other than the bare minimum servicing. Cheers for the delivery offer though |
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28th Nov 2022 3:07pm |
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