The problem with the luxury cars like this is that they made them so technical, and instead of finding an engine suitable for a truck, big lazy and torquey, they plonked car engines in, multi cylinder but relatively small swept volume per cylinder, which haven't proved to be especially durable unless maintained over and above.
One could wonder too what sort of mechanical sympathy these dead engines have seen, run low on oil? thrashed to hell from cold? switched off with the turbos still glowing red?
Maybe the sales successes have a sting in the tail, for them, in that in the newer catchments of buyers and users are people with little knowledge about looking after vehicles (i know of Disco 3's and 4s which have done immense mileage but have been looked after properly), where possibly Japanese competitor vehicles haven't appealed to the demograph that lacks mechanical sympathy to quite the same extent?
I don't know the answer to that question obviously as this is only opinion, just wondering aloud, i freely admit to being a Landcruiser fan, but if you neglect and abuse them they too won't forgive you, but Toyota hedge their bets by not offering stupid service intervals, nor do they try to get sports car performance from their industrial vehicle range.
I hope the new Defender has the simple attricbutes of the old one.
Edited by gordonbennet on 24/04/2018 at 19:56
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