I will give you my opinion and the experience it's drawn from. I had a 96 US spec Discovery, V8, auto for 6 months while I lived in Germany. It was a dent and ding free rig with tan leather and 50Kish miles. I had never owned a Rover, always domestic 4x4s. It belonged to a civilian employee on Ramstein. When I saw it for sale, I was stoked. I was drawn to it with fantasies of Camel Trophy legacy in my head. It was clean as a whistle, drove nicely (save a small exhaust leak) how bad could it be its 5 or 6 years old and low miles? I bought it and instantly beamed with pride. I had a roof rack consisting of a quarter mile of tubing and a green oval badge so I instantly shared a part of a legacy of conquering Africa and Camel Trophy routes.
The PO did disclose that the drivers power window did not work, no problem it has a small exhaust leak I will be fixing too. Now is when the fun began. I took it home with the temp tag, had my German friend suggest mechanic to repair the exhaust and ordered a regulator. The window regulator was over $250 and I disassembled the door and installed it but it didn't work. I was so mad at myself for spending the jack for a regulator without proper troubleshooting. Well, long story short it was the regulator. I got a bad one out of the box. One more replacement regulator and I am back in business.
I drove up to Kapaun AS for a USAEUR vehicle inspection (much more lenient than a TUV insp) to get tags. I hit a coin op car wash because I saw some seepage from the T-case output, I am good to go. I rolled in over the pit, dinged for drive shaft joint worn. The rest or the inspection was good now it's road test and light check. All lights and signals worked. On command I sounded the horn. BEEep and then nothing? My lights were still on when I started the horn but they shut off when the horn did. I had blown a couple of fuses. INSPECTION FAIL! I was given a form with discrepancies so I could return to the inspection when corrected. It took me two weeks to clean up most every connection I could locate. Still blew fuses. I ended up replacing the horn, the left tail lamp assy (used) and using the parts of the remaining two to overhauled the right sides lamp assy. Finally I am ready. Back to the inspection station with a new rubber driveline joint installed and fuses that won't blow. PASS! These hiccups could have happened to any vehicle, I am back to my Camel Trophy fantasy.
Drove the Disco back and forth to work trouble free for two weeks. Went to Popeyes Chicken for lunch, drivers window did not work…Argh!!! That ended up being another regulator. Maybe a bad batch? I also decided to take on the electric seats that didn't work. They were getting power but no movement, hum or buzz. I priced a replacement unit, sticker shock so I decided when I get the time I would rebuild (jury rig) it myself…flash forward, that never happened.
After about a month of thinking, “I got ahead of all the nagging used car issues”, I go to the Hospital at Landstuhl. When I am ready to leave, the Disco isn't. It's Friday so I get my wife to tow me to the house with the Grand Caravan. During that emasculating episode, I was having no fantasies London to Cape Town or Camel Trophy. This time was fuel pump. Several people I described the problem to guessed right away. I was down for a week waiting for the fuel pump. Finally it arrived, my weekend is set. The job was easy save draining the tank. I found out it was easy because relatively recently, it had already been replaced. The rig was only 50,000 miles? Bad batch of pumps?
Somewhere between the dead fuel pump and the next 2-3 months of wondering if I would be able to drive after dark or at all, I had an epiphany. I am living in central Europe and spending my weekends under a leaky truck with the hopes that it will be ready to take me to work on Monday. I am wasting way too much opportunity to keep this auto on the road. Nobody can reasonably justify that much labor and expense to keep an $8500, five and a half year old rig in service. What elese can I be doing with my time...IN EUROPE. I put it up for sale and bought an Audi 100 for $1000.
Sorry for the long winded tale. I just wanted to share my observations and why I have that opinion. Not so much for you, but the Rover guys that can smell a negative comment from three forums away. My advice to you is stay away from a Disco. I sort of chuckle to myself when hear all sorts of people who will say, “mine's been zero trouble except…. “ or “they're just fine if you stay up on the PM.” IMHO, these are classic rationalizations. If you want it for the styling and the Camel Trophy fantasy, great, I understand that. Emotions are valid reasons for purchase, just don't make excuses or skewed claims. Compare the expectations you have for any used car and see how Discos stack up, not well in my book. YMMV, and I am sure I will hear about it.

eepwall: