The HD-T and 1HZ Toyota I6 diesels used extensively in the 70 series Land Cruisers both have timing belts.
Let's recall all the small block Chev engines put into Jaguars in the 80's. And into Land Cruisers as well.
And I hate Chevs.
"Talk is cheap. Whiskey costs money."
Nearly every performance inspired British vechile is ready for the dump at 100,000 miles. Even those that love British cars are ready and waiting for something to break. (Renault,Triumph, Jaguar, Land Rover)
Thanks
200tdi, 300tdi, Td5, AJV8 in its varied forms, TDV6 in various forms; British designed/made, arguably the most widespread outside of the Buick derived alu V8's that were fitted from 1971 to 2004. Land Rover designed motors from the 90s onwards were quite advanced for some time.They rarely use British engineered engines.
HyperboleNearly every performance inspired British vehicle is ready for the dump at 100,000 miles.
True. Got a wrench and some sealant in the back always. The good ones are easy to fix.Even those that love British cars are ready and waiting for something to break.
Noise was the reason. Not saying a chain isn't better, it's just what they did.Why they put a timing belt on a diesel makes no sense to me.
Yes and no. Ford ownership maximized the service intervals which is/was great. Very reliable service intervals and good components. However fixing them got harder and space got tighter to work in. Parts cost is huge. Public perception in North American markets is largely skewed by the horrific BMW ownership in the early 2000s. Bad electronics was always the running joke since forever, but this is where all the crazy fault codes and car-stopping computers came in.When Ford bought Land Rover that was probably the peak of its relaibility.
Simplest answer is: huge rust-prone climate, all RHD, large concentration of vehicles in one place with very stringent MOT laws. See all the snapped toyota truck frames from back then too.Used Land Rover in England are cheap. I was reading a British defender ad the other day where the owner of a Defender bragged about having one of the few without aftermaket welds re-enforcing his frame.
I think the fact that many Land Rovers look great (particularly the Defender series, IMO) and are really capable when they are running keeps tempting people, like that stunningly hot girlfriend who is great in the sack but utterly batsh1t crazy and abusive. It's the way the Japanese and Brits view their engineering, I think. The Japanese strongly prioritize reliability, usually at the expense of conservative styling and engineering advancements, while the UK companies seem to accept less reliability, but push the envelope other ways. To some extent I could accept a sports car being finicky, but I can't accept an off road vehicle being anything less than very reliable. The Japanese seem to engineer a lot of redundancies and margin for error into their vehicles, and the Land Roves appear to never consider that.
There is a reason my sister in laws '03 Disco is worth $2500 and my '99 TLC is worth $12,500.
Edit- (01/13/16). Timing belt failed, and two bearings gone in engine. Repair estimate: $3100. Anybody want a parts Disco???
Being stateside, you are likely thinking more of the V8 powered Land Rover products, which are pretty poor with some exception and fit what you are saying. Diesel models (never sold here) can be fixed with pliers and baling wire, they are 99% mechanical. Land Rover considered reliability only for the Rest Of World market and the Range Rover, 90/110, and Discovery before BMW bought them.
Just think of a very extreme version of say a 3rd or 4th gen 4runner versus a diesel 70 series. The Rovers everyone but America got were easy to work with. American market reputation is based on one of the worst samples.
I'm pretty sure the most recent Duratorq diesel engines used in the latest versions of the Defender were in fact electronically controlled, not mechanical. I can't speak to LR's reputation overseas for reliability, though it does seem that Toyota and Nissan, among others, have done far better jobs of capturing the global 4x4 markets.
Not a good analogy you're using there.
Firstly, the 4runner is a derivative of the LandCruiser Prado platform that Toyota sells globally. The LC 70 is a different platform all together.
Secondly, other than the engines (the US vehicles got gasoline while the global ones got diesel), the 4runners and LandCruiser 200's that Japan imports into the US are pretty much the same as their global variants. The only 4x4's specifically designed for North American markets are the Tacoma and the Tundra/Sequoia.
Thirdly, the gasoline engines Toyota puts in most of its US 4x4's are extremely simple and reliable, even compared to the diesels used in overseas markets. In fact, a major criticism of Toyota's US offerings is that they have stuck with simple, but inefficient, naturally-aspirated gasoline v6's and v8's, while other truck companies are moving to turbo gasoline or turbo diesel setup's.