........They did demonstrate the dramatic difference between good line, bad line, with the Glad.
^This
........They did demonstrate the dramatic difference between good line, bad line, with the Glad.
Lift rods just keep it 2" above normal ride height all the time - will not affect EAS lift above that height and doesn't interface with the terrain response system. The only effect to driving dynamics is a higher COG in normal driving. Huge negative is when you need to get into a parking garage with less than 7 foot height...you can't.
Those sheep in the background feel much better knowing the Defender can back right up to where they may die. ?
Very impressive. The Gladiator had issues because of its wheelbase (137")...the Defender's is 119" and I'm willing to bet a little more ground clearance. The new 90 will have a 101" wheelbase and I can't wait to see it here again with the '94 90...
Tfl testing trucks on marbles again. Nothing wrong with it, but it's a bit of luck.
They did demonstrate the dramatic difference between good line, bad line, with the Glad.
That makes sense, thanks. I’m looking forward to the coming months when we see some at stock ride height doing its thing. I’d especially like to see one spec’d more closely to how this community would use it (slightly bigger & more aggressive tires, rear locker from factory, etc.). I’m not convinced that the lift rods will be a “necessary” mod yet (eye of the beholder, of course).
Critical for Land Rover to license that video so they can lock down the sheep farming market with this exact concern
Same! My dream video would compare the Defender 90 and 110 with the JL - 2 door and 4 door, both spec’d for the most “off road” worthiness they can be from the factory, and no other mods. Bonus points if it’s with the same driver picking an identical line. Take an established trail rating system and run the quadruplet through all the way to the max rated trail just to see their relative performance. I would be very curious what the practical limits are for the various stock vehicles without mods (knowing full well that the Jeep will be much easier to mod in the future if need be - this provides a bit more of an apples to apples contest). If anyone wants to donate $300k PM me for my paypal!!
I think you have hit on the truth of it. Most modern 4x4s (and by that I mean vehicles sold as off road rigs — like the Bison, Rubicon, Defender; I don’t just mean vehicles with a AWD/4x4 option) are good enough from the factory for 95%+ what people will see. Line selection and driver experience - and even simpler, tire tread and pressure — can make a much bigger difference than the brand of the rig off road.
TFL also tends to refer to moderate off road trails as being super tough off road conditions, even when it looks like the kind of stuff I wouldn’t hesitate to take my bone stock 1500 Silverado WT down on a typical Sunday drive — I don’t know if it’s editing/videography not properly representing how though it actually is, or if it’s perhaps the hosts have a different standard of “tough off road” than I do. But, they also tend to show the rigs in fairly typical and common conditions for the majority of adventure touring — the really extreme stuff is attempted by relatively few people as compared to the “testing on marbles” stuff they sometimes do.
Sure you can, you just put the truck in access mode height and lock it there.Lift rods just keep it 2" above normal ride height all the time - will not affect EAS lift above that height and doesn't interface with the terrain response system. The only effect to driving dynamics is a higher COG in normal driving. Huge negative is when you need to get into a parking garage with less than 7 foot height...you can't.
What he means is: once you fit lift rods, the Access height is now 2" higher.Sure you can, you just put the truck in access mode height and lock it there.
Yeah a 130 would be ideal IMO coming from a D3 and D4. Especially if they keep the spare tire on the back door. That should make some room for an aux fuel tank aft of the back axle.Nothing has been confirmed yet, so far we only have some footage of a V8 110 running around on the 'ring. Surely the V8 will be introduced eventually (don't know if a Defender needs a SV version, but with Bowler in the mix who knows) and will definitely command a premium over the other engines, just like it does in every car or truck from any other manufacturer. I was thinking they may have waited until the D130 launched to introduce a V8 across the range, but strangely there isn't much talk or spy shots of a 130 anymore, and I wonder if it's still in the cards. Hopefully it is, because a lot of existing Disco/LR3 and 4 owners have only one main complaint about the new 110 Defender, not enough cargo room behind the second row. The 130 would address those concerns (although the spare tire would probably have to go back under the car.)
Not with lift rods you can't. You lose access height.Sure you can, you just put the truck in access mode height and lock it there.