Other than the seats and the interior packaging, that interior is vomit-inducing.
I'd probably kill myself just at the sight of that steering wheel.
I scrapped a Daihatsu Rocky a couple of years ago, and the interior was...meh, but Scats are like those old LJ Suzuki's right?Yeah, I'm not convinced on the dashboard either - but that's because I think I'm used to much older dashboards with fewer things. It just seemed busy, and over detailed.
The Daihatsu has a pull knob for the headlights, another one for the blower fan, and one for the windscreen wipers. Oh, and a choke. Hazards are a little pull knob on the steering column, heating is controlled by 3 levers on the heater core (hot/cold. fresh or recirculated, cook your feet or melt the windscreen). Even my 80 only has 3 levers for the heating, and only a few buttons for other functions.
They certainly took inspiration from the 70 series Land Cruiser dashboard with the exposed screw heads, but I'm not sure they've pulled it off like Toyota did.... but that might be because the Toyota dash was designed in the 1980s, whilst this has been "designed" in the 2010s/2020 to look like something that was designed in the 1980s.
I scrapped a Daihatsu Rocky a couple of years ago, and the interior was...meh, but Scats are like those old LJ Suzuki's right?
I like this interior and the points behind it, and since there "had" to be some fancy shizz in there, like heated seats and what not, there "had" to be more. Is it too much? I dunno. My wife's Acadia's center stack is an abortion. Seriously, the worst design I've ever seen. So, my GX and Amigo a so much less cluttered. I think the "clutter" that exists here matches purpose.
My biggest concern here is the BMW materials. I know that Land Rover stuff is a nightmare, but I don't know enough about BMW stuff to know that it is a good thing or not. I guess it's time to start researching.
Mine was the Feroza elsewhere. I had gotten pretty good at knowing what parts would work for me, and from where I could get them. I had a full collection of stuff...and then I blew the head gasket, got it repaired at a decent amount of money...and got 200 miles out of it before it blew again, this time with a cracked head AND block. If you search the USA, just about any Feroza/US Rocky needs engine work, and a used block with no guarantee costs 5k American, shipped from Japan. So, sadly, off it went.Yep, the Daihatsu is like the LJ Suzuki, so very metallic, very little plastic. Depends on which "Rocky" you had - there was the tough as old boots Rocky that was square, and had a 2.8 diesel or about a 2.0 petrol in it, or there was the USA market Rocky that was called a Feroza or Sportrak in the rest of the world, and was much lighter duty. The square Rocky is still a popular ute around here, much the same as the Scat as they're both quite light and small.
I agree on the heated seats - I miss them from when I had Volvo wagons in the UK - but I think we've lost the simplicity of some of the early integrated controls from the steering wheel, and some of the other elements in the dash ergonomics.
Well, certainly helped make the LR3 one of if not the most reliable LR to date?!
LR3 has Ford switches and tech on the inside with Denso for engine management. The early L322’s had all the BMW switchgear and electronics and they’re the most unreliable LR ever built.My biggest concern here is the BMW materials. I know that Land Rover stuff is a nightmare, but I don't know enough about BMW stuff to know that it is a good thing or not. I guess it's time to start researching.
Well, certainly helped make the LR3 one of if not the most reliable LR to date?!
Other than the seats and the interior packaging, that interior is vomit-inducing.
I'd probably kill myself just at the sight of that steering wheel.
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