utherjorge
Observer
100k for sure. But can any of you state how good a BMW motor would be for off road? I assume inline 6s are torquey...but are they?
Grenadier: 87%
New Defender: 13%
"Australian pricing remains unconfirmed. Mr Tennant acknowledged the Grenadier cannot compete on price with Thailand-built utes – such as the Australian-delivered Toyota HiLux, Ford Ranger, Mazda BT-50 and Isuzu D-MAX – and hinted it could cost similar money to top-end utes such as the Ford Ranger Raptor, which costs about $80,000 drive-away."
That's about $55,000 USD unless that last reference was saying it would be $80k USD driveway. Add the standard US dealer markup and $55k is now $70k, tax, tags, title, and we are at $80k!
haha, jk jk, if $55k is the high end number, they better build a bigger production plant; and please give us the diesel option on first year orders!
$38,000.00 to $56,000.00 U.S. dollars.
Old-school Ineos Grenadier is British billionaire's brand new off-road SUV brand
Named after the pub where he thought of it.www.foxnews.com
I'm not actually sure how relevant that is anymore, like for example Jeep's legendary 4.0 from 1987 through 2003 started life making 215lb torque and ended its run making 235lb torque. The most recent BMW inline 6 that was naturally aspirated made 236lb of torque at 2700 rpm on 3.0 liters. Engine tech hasn't been standing still
Meanwhile transmissions are a whole lot better than ever before.. you could drop a modern ~2.5L-ish naturally aspirated 4 cylinder and a modern ~8ish speed transmission in any 80's or earlier off roader and it would be an upgrade on and off the road.
I saw that, and Car and Driver said $50s. I will buy one if that is the case. That's a superb price.
What globally available car is around the US$40k mark? That can be useful to see how it'll compare globally.I agree, 40s USD for a moderately spec'd Grenadier would be a superb price. They're doing this right. I want to learn more about the engine and how they'll address dealer service stateside, but, presuming those boxes check, Grenadier may well replace or supplement my 80 series after three decades of service.
What globally available car is around the US$40k mark? That can be useful to see how it'll compare globally.
I had a look at the UK prices and it was going to start at nearly 2x a basic Hilux double cab (a Defender 90 commercial is estimated to be 1.5x a Hilux), which fits with their Australian price expectation of AU$80k-ish.
I think the most analogous comparison would be a Land Cruiser 76 workmate, which in Australia retails for around the equivalent of $48K USD.
It wasn't so much a direct vehicle comparison, more the price point of something fairly standard, a bit like the Big Mac Index*- for example, a VW Golf in the UK isn't that different in price to the Hilux. Given that the expected UK price point is £40,000, that puts it comparable to a Volvo XC60 (base model Momentum @ £41k) which when translated to Aussie spec is AU$69k - which puts it in AU$7k of a base spec 70 series single cab and $2k of a wagon. Put a Volvo XC60 in the USA market, and it's coming out at US$40k (albeit with a different engine to the UK and Aussie ones - they were diesels).
So potentially, it could be hitting the USA at that $40k mark (unlikely as the $=£ isn't at parity), or nearer that $50k mark (more likely)
*Big Mac Index: A way of removing currency fluctuations to show how much things cost; I've also used multiples of the minimum wage before to do the same, which is often more useful than a direct exchange rate. https://www.economist.com/news/2020/01/15/the-big-mac-index