nickw
Adventurer
This is a question I have been wondering about for quite some time. All things being equal, which do you pick? Obviously both is the answer, but generally speaking as one goes up the other goes down. I supposed Diesels are an exception to the rule, the older ones, but not the newer crop of engines with all the wizardry.
Do you pick a series 3 rover that breaks down every 10,000 miles but is almost guaranteed fixable in the field? Maybe better to have the fancy LC 200 with its TPS and complicated wiring, but ‘virtually’ guaranteed 150,000 miles of trouble free use?
It’s easy to say a vehicle has done 1xx,xxx miles with no problems in hindsight, but that is no guarantee at mile 0.
I made it most of the way through Quiet for a Tuesday where TS recounted his experience with his G-wagen and made me start to re-think my decision on my FJ40. I had decided on a modern 5.3L electro-nightmare super reliable well engineered engine. I had to face the what-if scenario, breaking down in the middle of nowhere. Thought a carbed 350, although boring as all get out, may be a better decision due to its reparability. I know Toyota released carbed gas/petrol engines in Africa for years after they stopped here, presumably for reparability concerns.
Any opinions?
Do you pick a series 3 rover that breaks down every 10,000 miles but is almost guaranteed fixable in the field? Maybe better to have the fancy LC 200 with its TPS and complicated wiring, but ‘virtually’ guaranteed 150,000 miles of trouble free use?
It’s easy to say a vehicle has done 1xx,xxx miles with no problems in hindsight, but that is no guarantee at mile 0.
I made it most of the way through Quiet for a Tuesday where TS recounted his experience with his G-wagen and made me start to re-think my decision on my FJ40. I had decided on a modern 5.3L electro-nightmare super reliable well engineered engine. I had to face the what-if scenario, breaking down in the middle of nowhere. Thought a carbed 350, although boring as all get out, may be a better decision due to its reparability. I know Toyota released carbed gas/petrol engines in Africa for years after they stopped here, presumably for reparability concerns.
Any opinions?