Jeremy - I think you are getting emotional and thinking everyone is hating on you. I'm sure you are fustrated as hell on it but you need to take a step back. Maybe re-read all your posts and objectively read what people have said. If anything people have been real cool esp. AndrewClarke and dcwhybrew. I posted on pirate4x4 about getting 35"s and thought I had some solid questions (from owning the 90 for 4 years and growing up with 4x4's) and was essentially cast as a newb. But I got some good info and it made me think.
You are 21 - you are supposed to make mistakes and get beat up. I laugh at all the stupid **** I've done especially with cars (hell at twice your age I made some expensive rookie mistakes on my axle project: http://www.d-90.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25530). Owning a LR especially a 14 year old Disco ain't cheap and easy. But most of the time the journey is worth it. You said you ride mountain bikes - think of owning a LR as a 20 mile out and back ride, where the rear derailler blows up at mile 10 and you get lost at mile 15 and don't come out of the woods until after dark and beat to crap. But the experience and learning made the journey. Probably not the most fun ride but when you are railing misty singletrack and everything is flowing you get a better appreciation of it. That's the thing with these f'n Rovers. When the sun is shinning and the truck is running right and you just got thru a tech climb there is nothing better but damn you want to put a bullet in them when there is something wrong with it.
You also say you are no mechanic but it seems more like you just don't want to try. The tools needed to fix those axles/brakes are pretty simple and if you are looking to do any off-pavement travel would be a requirement to have on your truck (including a least some recovery points and straps). And with some work you can get them cheap. I actually used a block from a tree on the frame of my 90 to hold it up so I could work on the front springs/shocks the other day. I didn't even use jackstands when replacing my rear axle. Also would you go out into the woods on the bike or camping gear without knowing how to change a flat or set up camp? You really need to have some basic knowledge if you want to go offroad/overlanding.
I would spreadsheet what you've got into the Disco so far and do an honest assessment of what you could get for it. And see what that $$$ figure is. Talk to the mechanic and tell him you've got no more money and need the bleeding to stop. It seems he's been fixing your truck like you've got unlimited funds. If you think you could make your money back and really don't think learning more about LR's mechanics is your thing then dump it and keep the Focus. But if you will be loosing a bunch of coin and truely want to experience the Landie I say keep it and enjoy it. Put some stupid price associated to it like - "I'll be 50 cents a mile happier driving this Disco than the Focus." From the pics it looks like a nice truck and if this mechanic is worth it then you'll know stuff like the axles and brakes have a long time left on them. LR are not like owning a Honda or Ford Focus - more work but more to gain IMO.
You are 21 - you are supposed to make mistakes and get beat up. I laugh at all the stupid **** I've done especially with cars (hell at twice your age I made some expensive rookie mistakes on my axle project: http://www.d-90.com/forum/showthread.php?t=25530). Owning a LR especially a 14 year old Disco ain't cheap and easy. But most of the time the journey is worth it. You said you ride mountain bikes - think of owning a LR as a 20 mile out and back ride, where the rear derailler blows up at mile 10 and you get lost at mile 15 and don't come out of the woods until after dark and beat to crap. But the experience and learning made the journey. Probably not the most fun ride but when you are railing misty singletrack and everything is flowing you get a better appreciation of it. That's the thing with these f'n Rovers. When the sun is shinning and the truck is running right and you just got thru a tech climb there is nothing better but damn you want to put a bullet in them when there is something wrong with it.
You also say you are no mechanic but it seems more like you just don't want to try. The tools needed to fix those axles/brakes are pretty simple and if you are looking to do any off-pavement travel would be a requirement to have on your truck (including a least some recovery points and straps). And with some work you can get them cheap. I actually used a block from a tree on the frame of my 90 to hold it up so I could work on the front springs/shocks the other day. I didn't even use jackstands when replacing my rear axle. Also would you go out into the woods on the bike or camping gear without knowing how to change a flat or set up camp? You really need to have some basic knowledge if you want to go offroad/overlanding.
I would spreadsheet what you've got into the Disco so far and do an honest assessment of what you could get for it. And see what that $$$ figure is. Talk to the mechanic and tell him you've got no more money and need the bleeding to stop. It seems he's been fixing your truck like you've got unlimited funds. If you think you could make your money back and really don't think learning more about LR's mechanics is your thing then dump it and keep the Focus. But if you will be loosing a bunch of coin and truely want to experience the Landie I say keep it and enjoy it. Put some stupid price associated to it like - "I'll be 50 cents a mile happier driving this Disco than the Focus." From the pics it looks like a nice truck and if this mechanic is worth it then you'll know stuff like the axles and brakes have a long time left on them. LR are not like owning a Honda or Ford Focus - more work but more to gain IMO.