I think the coilers with a transfercase are more capable than Series rigs out of the box, tyre size for tyre size once you remove the spoilers & such. And that they are at least as reliable with the same level of maintenance. I have pretty much always thought that.
Well, then why do you need to speak out about the vehicles and owners so often?
What I DO say is that Series Land Rovers have about as much in common with coiler Land Rovers (Defender body parts, & earlier diffs excluded) as they have in common with Xterras and Unimogs. Mechanical concerns are different, and they travel at different speeds so coiler owners often leave the Series rigs behind to travel by themselves.
Well, ok. But what is the reason for bringing this up? We know they're different. All vehicles change. How is an FJ80 the same as an FJ40? And a Taco is different from an Earth Roamer.
That's one of the interesting things about this website.
also maintain that with their level of complication it takes more work to keep a coiler maintained to the same level as a Series rig.
I can't really argue that point as I haven't owned it long enough. I do know that my modern cars are vastly easier to maintain than any of my older cars were.
It has become evident to me that you really don't know what my point of view is or you would not be distorting it so much.
I don't know anyone who has hard statistical maintenance data on Land Rover maintenance between 1951 and 2008. So my life experiences are all I have to go by. That's about 33 years of Land Rover ownership.
Well, maybe I don't. Maybe I'm misreading what you write. But I know I'm not the only one. Just seems many discussions in this forum get sidetracked with how leafers are better or different than coilers, and I really don't understand why it's even a point of discussion.
Maybe your right. There is a lot of harassment going on here. You seem to have been harassing me at most every thread. Maybe I would find more peace elsewhere.
I can't understand this comment. I've never said anything against you before. If you reread this thread, you'll notice on page 8 is the first time we come to conflict directly. I'm talking about the history of EFI and how people can be resistant to change. And then you quote me and make mention of a Defender having a crank sensor problem. Completely off-topic and a direct attack on coilers.
and therein lies the problem with your statment: you cant buy just a $100 dollar tool to give you insight as to why your system failure lights are on. it will only do one of many systems on the truck. and you cant buy a 500$ tool for a rover because its not a popular model built in high numbers. you cant even get a module for a high end scan tool like the ones built and sold by snap-on. and there is NO tool for any amount of money that will allow you to retune it to higher power or aftermarket specs.
Yes I can. For $170 I can get a system that will tell me any why the CEL is on, which can often be easily traced back to an exact failure point. Furthermore, said device can also output realtime continuous data streams for many of the engine's sensors and functions which helps in diagnostic.
The only place you really have a point is in the other computers.
If I get a SLABS ECU malfunction and the traction control fails... yeah, that sucks, but guess what, I'm not worse off than any other non-TC vehicle.
Transmission computer fails? No different than an old auto with cracked vacuum hoses or plugged trans oil passages, and you're not likely fixing that problem trailside either.
The only place you really have a point is the body control computer, and there is really only one failure mode likely to leave you stranded, and that is the no crank condition.
and there is NO tool for any amount of money that will allow you to retune it to higher power or aftermarket specs.
Retune? No. So just replace it with any number of affordable generic aftermarket engine management systems. It's little different than switching carbs in years past.
no one will be able to fix them without a $5000+ computer based tool. who will buy a tool thats worth more than the truck is? if the value is lower it will just prompt more people to trade them in and buy new; where the real money is to be made.
Yes you can. As I mentioned, $170 gets you a very useful tool. You'd never need to do more, save replacing the actual computer. Which are affordable since so many "young" vehicles are being sent to the scrapper because they're "unfixable."
When EFI was new, ECU's cost $1000's of dollar at the scrap yard. Now that everybody is used to them, and lots of vehicles are in the scrapper, they're worth $100 now.
Remember when airbags cost $1000's to replace? Now people are blowing them up on YouTube for fun because they're only worth $60.
the only way/reason that the discos and rrc and to a lesser extent p38s/mk3 will be able to survive as long as a series is because there are many more of them here in the states in junkyards and LR specific recyclers. the factory will definitly not build parts for them or support them as long. they have already closed the classic parts support network. how long did that last? a few years at most.
That's exactly the point I'm making. So many of them being scrapped or crashed makes the parts in plentiful supply. Parts are much more available for my Disco than for any leafer, just because there's more of them on the road getting junked.
OEM's are required by law to provide replacement parts for 14 years. As you have seen with the older vehicles, the aftermarket picks up after that. I have no doubt that the popularity of the newer vehicles, particularly overseas, will mean parts will continue to be available from specialist shops. Just as they are for leafers today.
this is expedition portal. this isnt discoweb or LRO, etc. or even a land rover based site. as a whole, the board could care less if the vehile was built in the us japan or europe. its a site based on vehicle dependent travel. TeriAnn would appear to have many many miles and years of overland travel experience under her belt perhaps it would be wise to listen to all parties with an open mind. a wise man once said " you learn a lot more by listening than talking"
I agree completely. I love seeing what she's done with her truck, and reading about travels. I just have a problem with the direction some of these conversations go, for no good reason. And that's what I'm questioning.
Being a young automotive engineer, I know a thing or two about modern vehicle design and maintenance. Perhaps the people who are fans of the older vehicles should listen to those of us with younger ones.