Jwestpro
Explorer
...We have all seen Land Rover take a completely different approach to vehicle design and systems since those classic, Camel Trophy era machines. I had all but discounted the new offerings, but my opinion on the newer Land Rovers changed when I purchased a Range Rover MKIII for my wife (Stephanie is the designer of Overland Journal) and then subsequently took a month-long trip in Australia with a Discovery 3 (LR3).
The quality of the new Land Rovers has increased so significantly that he now employes only six technicians. This is big news - modern Land Rovers seem to be pretty reliable.
We obtained a 2012 LR4 for testing and put it through the paces. I really liked it.
2.5 years on now. When you chose this LR4 in 2012, the current supercharged V6 was not an option in North America. If you had to do it over, and had both engines and transmissions to choose from, which do you think you'd want to try starting now? As far as I know all systems that matter much are identical aside from the engine and transmission.
The interior of the 2012 is close enough to 2015 to call it identical for purpose of this question so it's really specifically about the mechanical items alone. The obvious differences being slight fuel economy and 8 spd transmission vs more total grunt in the V8. Yet where it matters most, off road going slow in low range, there may be nearly no appreciable difference. Though anyone towing will probably want as much motor as possible so priorities can vary widely. I do wonder about long term servicing of a supercharger vs standard v8.
Some people, usually those who've already bought a SCV6, claim better high altitude power retention making the results similar, those with V8 are generally glad to hear the engine growl. Not much buyers remorse or envy on either side.
Those considering an LR4 now though are in an interesting position, worrying about the demise of the boxy shape forthcoming and climbing pricing, and with "barely pre-owned" V8's to choose from vs SCV6.