Broken rear shock, driver stranded. Narrator quoted $2700 to replace one shock, suggests shock failures are an emerging problem.
I answered my own question. The new Defender has magnetorheological dampers which fail where the damper mount has been drilled out to allow the wiring to enter the shock to control fluid viscosity. I know that this technology has been around for a while for sports sedans and the like, but putting it on an off road vehicle?
Hopefully there's an aftermarket fix for this soon, but it helps explain the $2,700 per unit cost. In reading through some of the other Land Rover forums it would appear that this failure is becoming more than an emerging problem and the shocks cannot easily be replaced with a more traditional damper due to the computer controls and integration with the rest of the suspension/terrain response system. Ugh.
Not that I could order and receive a new Defender or Grenadier any time soon anyway, but definitely evidence that it is worth doing the cooling system maintenance on my LR4 to keep it chugging along for a few more years while these bugs surface and are worked out.
Are the shocks any different on the coil sprung suspension?That certainly makes the factory coil-over option more appealing — too bad you cannot get ATR2 or the max tow options with the coil-overs.
Would the 4” subframe lift and 1” lift roads not have something to do with the failure.
Or is that just a coincidence?
Are the shocks any different on the coil sprung suspension?
Yikes.
I dunno what to say other than that. To have something as critical as that be so fragile and complex is a major issue and confirms what a lot of folks feared -- how these things break matters. I LOVE this thing, but the more I learn the more I see it being ruled out of contention for anything other than a DD for me. It's rapidly becoming not the kind of rig I feel comfortable depending on for the health and safety of my family.
No body ever made that claim that the true defender was a safe car. Even the most bonehead fans acknowledge it.We don't even need to speculate about the occupants had this been in a "real" Defender
Did some off-roading last weekend with a bunch of new 110s, a 90, and several other LR models. The design of the Defender has grown on me a lot in the last year, so I was interested in seeming them up close.
The interiors look good. Having a dog and preschooler, I’m all about easy to clean interiors. The options available on the Defender mean you can have a more utilitarian interior or something more posh, so I appreciate that.
What surprised me is that while the 110s look huge, their interior space is smaller than my LR3. The first two rows of both vehicles are similar, but the cargo space of the 110 is 8” shorter behind the 2nd row. I could have sworn the Defender is longer, but excluding the spare tire, the Defender is 187” long (LR3 is 191”). Eating that cargo space could be tough with the dog and our camping gear, which I religiously keep partitioned from the cabin for safety. The real kicker is the turning circle: 42.9ft for the 110 v. 38.7ft for the LR3. This must be due to the wider track and bigger tires on the 110, but going to a smaller vehicle that’s less maneuverable is a hard sell.
The 90, with a front bench makes a good case against the LR3, so long as the 3 of us remain right sized for a bench seat. Thinking about that brings back fond memories of riding in the center seat of my dad’s old Ford Pickup as kid between him and my mom or older brother. But that doesn’t seem like a good option for more than a few years…
This trip made me appreciate my LR3 all the more. It’s really in a sweet spot between utility, capability, and comfort that is hard to match.