My next new Land Rover may just say Jeep on the bonnet.
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What about an older G-Wagen? I think they are cool
My next new Land Rover may just say Jeep on the bonnet.
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Rover started going to **** after the Series IIa, the last Rover made for men. Plastics and over-complicated electronics began creeping in with the Series III and it was a downhill slide from there. Now the world's full of grande late soccer moms, magic-traction-button pansies looking to advertise their financial status, and put-everyone-in-a-bubble safety laws. The world changed and LR was forced to follow. We have no one to blame but ourselves, our sissy-*** selves.
While I happen to be someone who owns and likes 3 rovers built well after the Series III, and I am none of what you suggest in your description of people who own them; you hit the nail on the head with "world changed and LR was forced to follow." They can't stay in business as a viable worldwide vehicle manufacturer making rugged boxes on wheels like they made 50 years ago, no matter how many of us wish they could.
Toyota seems to being doing well with its LC 78 series. LR just doesn't want to be in the utility market. My LR4 would be gone in less than a heartbeat for a rugged/utility D110 remake. Of course, the same goes for a modern LC 78.
While I happen to be someone who owns and likes 3 rovers built well after the Series III, and I am none of what you suggest in your description of people who own them; you hit the nail on the head with "world changed and LR was forced to follow." They can't stay in business as a viable worldwide vehicle manufacturer making rugged boxes on wheels like they made 50 years ago, no matter how many of us wish they could.
The guy is a liar or utter fool.The current Defender has never sold on its design....
Not many folks wheel a $50K vehicle.
They could make the new Defender resemble the old one stylistically. They just don't want to.
The real problem is that they see a need to have the new unit "Designed". Land Rovers most important vehicles were all created by real engineers. Not guys wearing purple silk shirts and cuff links.
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This is a good idea in theory, but it's what I was getting at above. Jeep is a mass produced, volume oriented brand selling to all kinds of demographics all over the world. LR is not trying to be all things to all people. They aren't targeting the young guy with a reasonable job who has 25k to spend on a vehicle, regardless of if we like that decision or not. When their "cheapest" crossover (LR2) starts at over 40k, that should be telling us something.