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"beamendsltd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:18a7a604e%[email protected]...
> In message <[email protected]>
> "Huw" <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> wrote:
>

is not the same as Platform Engineering!
>
>> As for engines in LR products, the Ford and Jaguar and Volvo [all Ford if
>> you must be pedantic] based engines now likely to be used in the
>> vehicles
>> are an improvement on the TD5 and lacklustre TD6 in the Range Rover
>> application. I test drove an Audi Q7 last week and the engine performance
>> and refinement make my TD6 appear really dire in comparison.

>
> Two entirely different machines. Audi may like to think their
> effrot is in the same league as the Range Rover, but it isn't,
> by any stretch of the imagination.


We'll see. It has a different emphasis and that's for sure. I have a Q7 on
order and have a current Range Rover and have had many other brands over the
years and they are all different. Yes the Range Rover has superior ground
clearance and a low range but let's face it, even mine spends most of their
time on road. The MercedesM and BMW X5 never failed to take me anywhere, on
or off road, that I wished to and neither, I suspect will the Audi.



The Td5 is fine in its intended
> application, the Discovery,


The TD5 is not great and inadequate for the LR products. Its torque curve
drops off the end of a cliff at low revs.





the so called Td6 is just another example
> of badge engieering - "We need and engine for this application, we
> can afford to develop a new engine so we'll make this one do".


The BMW was and is a good engine though it is poorly matched with the ZF
automatic in the Range Rover for some reason so when asked to accellerate
rapidly it revs like heck and downshifts but doesn't have the woomff that it
should and does have with different software in the X5.
The main complaint with the Range Rover is that the cabin is badly insulated
from engine noise. The engine seems much noisier than when it is used in any
BMW application and this is well known. Overall it is a superb engine of its
time but it is now in need of an update which it will soon get.





I
> have worked in VW/Audi group and seen this problem first hand in
> one of their "brands" new models, and the result was the model
> effectively being handed to the marketing people to re-define
> the marques long-held image to "re-align customer expectations".
> In other words it was a codge!


In the same way as you just described Jaguar and Land Rover products you
mean?



>
>>No doubt the V6
>> and V8 Jaguar/LR/Ford/Peugeot diesel engines will redress the balance in
>> LR's favour again for a while. That is progress and what makes the world
>> economy turn, that something new must be more desirable and/or provide
>> positive advantages over existing products. This brings us back to the
>> Defender and the reason I still run my old 1984 110 Hi-cap. A new one
>> with
>> TD5 is not more desirable and only provides one advantage which I am
>> unimpressed by and that is more power. If the advantages of a new model
>> were
>> greater I would change more regularly and would thus provide a continuous
>> income flow to Land Rover as I do for other companies and products. I
>> bought
>> a new Range Rover for instance. I would not have bought another of the
>> previous model and I would not buy another TD6 even though I like my
>> current
>> one a lot.

>
> Just keep the 110 - thats what I'm doing.


That's what I have done. Not that it would be a first choice should they
have made bigger steps to improve the product and provide what I need.


I have no patricular desire
> to have a Td5 Defender (wrong engine for the job), so I'm keeping
> my 200Tdi 110 SW, which has exactly the right engine for the job.
> I've got nothing agaist 300Tdi's - I would feel the same about my car
> if it had been made a year later with a 300.
>
> I have no interest in owning a Range Rover at all, so I can only
> pass on cutomers comments, which are largely that LR have lost the
> plot in terms of what the vehicle is "for", which for the company
> that invented the market sector is seriously bad news.
>


They are wrong. The Range Rover is superb off road as long as the tyre
specification is not too wide and low profile [a customer choice]. In fact
it is probably still second to none in this respect. It is also a good roomy
load carrier. A good towing vehicle. Has superb equipment and luxury and
tours in grand style. With leather seats it is very close to its original
concept.
Yes it is expensive to buy and expensive to run. This has always been true.
My experience is that it is far better built and more reliable than ever
before. It is also the best diesel engine they have ever offered, though it
is now far from being the best diesel engine offered in a large vehicle. But
Land Rover have never offered the very best diesel engines in their
vehicles.
I just cannot see where they have 'lost the plot' with the Range Rover.

Where they have really lost the plot, or even given up plotting, is with the
woefully underdeveloped Defender. In mechanical terms it can hold its head
high and the revised model could only be an improvement with the new engine
given emission regulatory constraints, but body-wise they are still back in
the 1970's and certainly not the better for it.

Huw



 
Huw wrote:
<snip>
>
> Where they have really lost the plot, or even given up plotting, is with the
> woefully underdeveloped Defender. In mechanical terms it can hold its head
> high and the revised model could only be an improvement with the new engine
> given emission regulatory constraints, but body-wise they are still back in
> the 1970's and certainly not the better for it.
>
> Huw
>
>
>

The late 50's, surely?

Stuart
 

"Srtgray" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Huw wrote:
> <snip>
>>
>> Where they have really lost the plot, or even given up plotting, is with
>> the woefully underdeveloped Defender. In mechanical terms it can hold its
>> head high and the revised model could only be an improvement with the new
>> engine given emission regulatory constraints, but body-wise they are
>> still back in the 1970's and certainly not the better for it.
>>
>> Huw
>>
>>
>>

> The late 50's, surely?
>
> Stuart


Well they did add a plastic dashboard around 1971 and wind-up windows in
1994 if I remember correctly, but otherwise there is not much difference to
the cab now than there was in 1958 when they introduced the SeriesII.
People are bigger and expect more today. Utilities buy them because their
drivers' comfort is of secondary importance but the self-employed
owner-driver has deserted LR in droves just as they did when Series vehicles
became outdated in the late 1970's. The Defender needs a bigger update this
time, not to the mechanical but to the body, which is exactly what it is not
going to get :-(

Huw


 

"Huw" <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> wrote

and wind-up windows in
> 1994 if I remember correctly,


That should read '1984' of course. ROTFLOL.
I know I should be crying over this because it is beyond a joke. And they
think a new dash will make any difference?

Huw


 
On or around Sun, 3 Sep 2006 19:03:38 +0100, "Huw"
<hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> enlightened us thusly:

>Well they did add a plastic dashboard around 1971 and wind-up windows in
>1994


My 1985 one had wind-up windows...
--
Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
"Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero" (sieze today, and put
as little trust as you can in tomorrow) Horace (65 - 8 BC) Odes, I.xi.8
 
On or around Sun, 3 Sep 2006 19:07:21 +0100, "Huw"
<hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> enlightened us thusly:

>
>"Huw" <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> wrote
>
>and wind-up windows in
>> 1994 if I remember correctly,

>
>That should read '1984' of course. ROTFLOL.
>I know I should be crying over this because it is beyond a joke. And they
>think a new dash will make any difference?
>


having said that, there's not a fat lot wrong with my series III. I
actually enjoy driving that as much as the fast ford, these days, which is
SO bloody frustrating. In the ford, I'm forever up someone's exhaust pipe
swearing at 'em for only doing 60, and looking for opportunities to pass,
and being thwarted by other covelling grunts coming the other way in 35 mph
convoys on every bloody straight.

in the SIII, cruising at about 40-50, it's not stupidly noisy nor as
uncomfortable as it looks as though it should be, and on the rare occasions
when you *do* get to overtake something it's a real achievement.

's a bit like the old boxer (BMW R60) - it's not remotely fast by modern
600cc bike standards, but on real roads it's a hoot, and quite a challenge
to ride well at 60-80 mph, and while you can still get busted, it's not
instant licence-losing territory like being pulled for 130 would be. Modern
bikes are boring at 60-70 sort of speeds, and if you go fast enough to make
it exciting, you're either not gonna live long or not gonna have a licence
long.
--
Austin Shackles. www.ddol-las.net my opinions are just that
"Carpe diem, quam minimum credula postero" (sieze today, and put
as little trust as you can in tomorrow) Horace (65 - 8 BC) Odes, I.xi.8
 

"Austin Shackles" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On or around Sun, 3 Sep 2006 19:07:21 +0100, "Huw"
> <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> enlightened us thusly:
>
>>
>>"Huw" <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> wrote
>>
>>and wind-up windows in
>>> 1994 if I remember correctly,

>>
>>That should read '1984' of course. ROTFLOL.
>>I know I should be crying over this because it is beyond a joke. And they
>>think a new dash will make any difference?
>>

>
> having said that, there's not a fat lot wrong with my series III. I
> actually enjoy driving that as much as the fast ford, these days, which is
> SO bloody frustrating. In the ford, I'm forever up someone's exhaust pipe
> swearing at 'em for only doing 60, and looking for opportunities to pass,
> and being thwarted by other covelling grunts coming the other way in 35
> mph
> convoys on every bloody straight.
>
> in the SIII, cruising at about 40-50, it's not stupidly noisy nor as
> uncomfortable as it looks as though it should be, and on the rare
> occasions
> when you *do* get to overtake something it's a real achievement.
>
> 's a bit like the old boxer (BMW R60) - it's not remotely fast by modern
> 600cc bike standards, but on real roads it's a hoot, and quite a challenge
> to ride well at 60-80 mph, and while you can still get busted, it's not
> instant licence-losing territory like being pulled for 130 would be.
> Modern
> bikes are boring at 60-70 sort of speeds, and if you go fast enough to
> make
> it exciting, you're either not gonna live long or not gonna have a licence
> long.


That doesn't help LR sell new ones though. Anyone who wants a clunker can
find a cheap Series if that is their cup of tea. I would expect more for my
£15k + VAT though.

Huw


 

"Austin Shackles" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On or around Sun, 3 Sep 2006 19:07:21 +0100, "Huw"
> <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> enlightened us thusly:
>
> >
> >"Huw" <hedydd[nospam]@tiscali.co.uk> wrote
> >
> >and wind-up windows in
> >> 1994 if I remember correctly,

> >
> >That should read '1984' of course. ROTFLOL.
> >I know I should be crying over this because it is beyond a joke. And they
> >think a new dash will make any difference?
> >

>
> having said that, there's not a fat lot wrong with my series III. I
> actually enjoy driving that as much as the fast ford, these days, which is
> SO bloody frustrating. In the ford, I'm forever up someone's exhaust pipe
> swearing at 'em for only doing 60, and looking for opportunities to pass,
> and being thwarted by other covelling grunts coming the other way in 35

mph
> convoys on every bloody straight.
>


And when you've got none of those coming and you are in a R/R you find lots
of little islands where you could overtake. Traffic calming ?, frustrating
if you ask me. I suppose it's just another way we can waste fossil fuels.

Martin

> in the SIII, cruising at about 40-50, it's not stupidly noisy nor as
> uncomfortable as it looks as though it should be, and on the rare

occasions
> when you *do* get to overtake something it's a real achievement.
>
> 's a bit like the old boxer (BMW R60) - it's not remotely fast by modern
> 600cc bike standards, but on real roads it's a hoot, and quite a challenge
> to ride well at 60-80 mph, and while you can still get busted, it's not
> instant licence-losing territory like being pulled for 130 would be.

Modern
> bikes are boring at 60-70 sort of speeds, and if you go fast enough to

make
> it exciting, you're either not gonna live long or not gonna have a licence
> long.
>



 
Oily wrote:

||| looking for opportunities to pass, and being thwarted by other
||| covelling grunts coming the other way in 35 mph convoys on every
||| bloody straight.
|||
||
|| And when you've got none of those coming and you are in a R/R you
|| find lots of little islands where you could overtake. Traffic
|| calming ?, frustrating if you ask me. I suppose it's just another
|| way we can waste fossil fuels.

There was a letter in yesterday's Torygraph from a policeman, who warned
that people who live on roads with speed bumps don't get the policing the
others get. The fuzz in his area have had so many bad backs etc from the
jarring that they will only drive down a speed-humped road if ordered to, or
after an incident. They won't patrol there routinely. Another
manifestation of the Law of Unintended Consequences.

--
Rich
==============================

Take out the obvious to email me.


 

"Richard Brookman" wrote

> Oily wrote:
>
> ||| looking for opportunities to pass, and being thwarted by other
> ||| covelling grunts coming the other way in 35 mph convoys on every
> ||| bloody straight.
> |||
> ||
> || And when you've got none of those coming and you are in a R/R you
> || find lots of little islands where you could overtake. Traffic
> || calming ?, frustrating if you ask me. I suppose it's just another
> || way we can waste fossil fuels.
>
> There was a letter in yesterday's Torygraph from a policeman, who warned
> that people who live on roads with speed bumps don't get the policing the
> others get. The fuzz in his area have had so many bad backs etc from the
> jarring that they will only drive down a speed-humped road if ordered to,

or
> after an incident. They won't patrol there routinely. Another
> manifestation of the Law of Unintended Consequences.
>
>

Speed bumps should be illegal, they are an obstruction and they don't seem
to slow the intended down at all. It wouldn't be so bad if you could bill
the council for damage to shockers and springs.

Martin


 
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