A rising tide lifts all boats - they may be rated comparatively low, but when you look at problem reports Jeep is actually rated even lower by all consumer reporting outlets, and when you compare to where they were 20 years ago, they are light years ahead in reliability. Unfortunately Jeep and Land Rover are rated in different classes of vehicle.It's a good question @DieselRanger ! How long must the LR fans of the world go around wearing this Scarlet Letter R for Reliability?
How about this- for every 1 year of LR being in the bottom 3rd of the reliability rankings we'll say the new Defender needs to have 4 months of reliability? Not a bad deal for LR- only 4 months of reliability going forward for every 1 year of unreliability in their past. A quick google search says that LR was repeatedly ranked as one of the least reliable vehicles basically for the last 20 years. (I'd have an exact number but got tired of tallying the mediocrity...it was depressing) 20 years divided by 4 months equals 5 years.
In 5 years, if the Defender has proven reliable we can agree to remove the shadow of it's leaky, flat air-bag, electronic gremlin riddled history. Sound fair?
Looks like you've got your head on straight... slowly going from 'most extreme capability' to 'wildly overbuilt' to 'how much do I really need?' My friends are all going through this process as they age and move from 'tacti-cool' jeeps and toyotas to perfectly capable, stock, comfortable rigs that can still go everywhere without the compromises of enormous tires, heavy armor, poor ride quality, etc. I did a 50k mile roadtrip throughout the US (including Alaska) in 2015-16 and wished the whole time that I had gone with a truck that didn't have a lift, didn't have 33" E-rated tires, and handled a bit better on the road ('06 Xterra). That's how I ended up in my stock LR3 and it's been exactly what I needed.
My personal take is that the really smart engineers already did come up with something cool, no need to go modding bumpers on day 1. We're in the PNW, we don't need to worry about hitting enormous mammals at 60mph, unless you're on the hunt for Sasquatch. If you insist on a winch just option it that way.
PM me if you wanna wheel (also in PNW)
My next rig will be kept as close to stock as possible. Seems no matter where I crawl my truck to, there's already some dude there in a stock-whatever. It's fun to build up rigs but they are mostly vanity anyway.
Thank you. I was about to put the EXPO censoring tool into overdrive (and possibly get myself banned) with an angry expletive-filled rant absolutely **************** on his arguments, but it seems you did so with a calm tone.Your original post used the H3 Alpha as an example, which is a low volume rig....which according to you has not dropped in value much, cool, we'll take your word for it. The vast majority of H3's, per your wiki pull above, are not unique, have no rarity factor and based on 20 second craigslist search are $6k or less rigs.
As someone pointed out here before, reliability is relative. The vast majority of failures on modern LRs is due to software issues that oftentimes are easily resolved/self fix. Considering that automobiles as a whole are getting much more reliable, I'd love to see the raw data from these rankings to see what the delta between the top 1/3 and bottom 1/3 is. All it takes is a glitchy sat nav or uncooperative radio screen to be at the top or bottom of the rankings.It's a good question @DieselRanger ! How long must the LR fans of the world go around wearing this Scarlet Letter R for Reliability?
How about this- for every 1 year of LR being in the bottom 3rd of the reliability rankings we'll say the new Defender needs to have 4 months of reliability? Not a bad deal for LR- only 4 months of reliability going forward for every 1 year of unreliability in their past. A quick google search says that LR was repeatedly ranked as one of the least reliable vehicles basically for the last 20 years. (I'd have an exact number but got tired of tallying the mediocrity...it was depressing) 20 years divided by 4 months equals 5 years.
In 5 years, if the Defender has proven reliable we can agree to remove the shadow of it's leaky, flat air-bag, electronic gremlin riddled history. Sound fair?
He ain't worth getting banned over - I don't even know why I respond...most of his posts lack any resemblance of thought, logic or level headed thinking.Thank you. I was about to put the EXPO censoring tool into overdrive (and possibly get myself banned) with an angry expletive-filled rant absolutely **************** on his arguments, but it seems you did so with a calm tone.
Well said. I have a buddy who got into Rover 5 years ago and has since aquired a P38 and an early 2000's Ranger Rover, both with lifts and bumpers but otherwise pretty stock....to your point, very few problems beyond some annoyance issues, but overall very solid rigs. He wheels them, drives down to Baja with them (from Oregon) and puts big miles on them. Both bought site unseen, with 100k miles +/-.As someone pointed out here before, reliability is relative. The vast majority of failures on modern LRs is due to software issues that oftentimes are easily resolved/self fix. Considering that automobiles as a whole are getting much more reliable, I'd love to see the raw data from these rankings to see what the delta between the top 1/3 and bottom 1/3 is. All it takes is a glitchy sat nav or uncooperative radio screen to be at the top or bottom of the rankings.
The only LR to ever leave me stranded was my D2. I've since had (2) LR3's (ultra low and ultra high mileage examples) and a new RRS. My current LR3 has 175k miles and is downright solid. The only other car to leave me stranded somewhere was my previous 1-owner YJ Wrangler with 140k miles. I'd argue that the stigma today is undeserved and is a remnant of the D1, D2, P38 and *shivers in disgust*, Freelander days. LR3/LR4, Gen 1 RRS, L405, L494 are temperamental at worst. By LR standards, they're bulletproof. By normal car standards, they're just as unreliable as any other car I've owned.
I don't offer this to be contrarian or to compel love or hate, but, for purposes of objective discussion of Defender's remote touring merits, Land Rover's bottom-of-the-class dependability must play prominently.
Land Rover literally builds the least dependable vehicles sold in the U.S.
T-Willy, I don't know why you insist on bringing facts, evidence and research into this conversation....there are fantasies to uphold!
Well. . . here is another perspective. We all agree that Lexus (and Toyota) are the high water mark of reliability. In 2003, when Toyota was producing stalwart vehicles like the 100 Series Land Cruiser, the 4.7 Liter Tundra, the 3.4 Liter Tacoma, and others, their defects per 100 vehicles was 201. So, if you will hear me out, a modern Land Rover is just as reliable as a vehicle built by Toyota in 2000, and measured in 2003.I don't offer this to be contrarian or to compel love or hate, but, for purposes of objective discussion of Defender's remote touring merits, Land Rover's bottom-of-the-class dependability must play prominently.
Land Rover literally builds the least dependable vehicles sold in the U.S.
To me, this seems a desperate reach. Equally desperate was their deafening silence on the fact that same 2020 data put Land Rover in dead last among care makers--a glaringly relevant fact.
So, lots of desperate optimism, at least to my ears.
I hope they're right--Defender would be a fantastic touring truck if it proves reliable.