sasquatch15
Member
Maybe something like the Peregrine 180 would work.
The rear hatch and the rotary shift knob were the only two things I didn't like about my D5. The TDV6 was outstanding and it was a great road car. I easily drove up a steep rutted hill that defeated an old Series II 109. My thinking is hatches belong on minivans not SUVs. If they had fitted a split tailgate to the D5 I think it would have been a lot more popular.I don't think the batwing awning will work. The rear hatch sticks up 12-14 inches above roofline when open
Looks like that could be coming on the next generation Discovery - rear hatch similar to the RR / RRS. I think the rear end in general is an acquired taste - on first look in photographs, I thought it looked like a dung beetle ready to roll a turd, but it grew on me very quickly. The hatch is quite tall, and if your garage isn't a tall one, you find yourself having to duck around two very sharp corners to get into it.The rear hatch and the rotary shift knob were the only two things I didn't like about my D5. The TDV6 was outstanding and it was a great road car. I easily drove up a steep rutted hill that defeated an old Series II 109. My thinking is hatches belong on minivans not SUVs. If they had fitted a split tailgate to the D5 I think it would have been a lot more popular.
Honestly I like hatches. They make it easy to get deeply packed cargo and provide a nice little sun/rain shelter.Looks like that could be coming on the next generation Discovery - rear hatch similar to the RR / RRS. I think the rear end in general is an acquired taste - on first look in photographs, I thought it looked like a dung beetle ready to roll a turd, but it grew on me very quickly. The hatch is quite tall, and if your garage isn't a tall one, you find yourself having to duck around two very sharp corners to get into it.
American tastes also equate soft edges with fragility, rather than refinement in design, regardless of what's underneath.
I actually wish the D5 had hatch glass that opens. Super convenient when you just need to grab something, without having to open the whole rear hatch/door, like when you have a bike rack on it.Honestly I like hatches. They make it easy to get deeply packed cargo and provide a nice little sun/rain shelter.
To be fair, I also think a minivan body with the Discovery's drivetrain/suspension would be the ultimate adventure vehicle.
Yeah, because Jeeps don't have any ECUs or fancy E-lectronic giz-whangs. @onemanarmy just doesn't understand what it takes to build and certify vehicles today. Even the Land Cruiser is gone from US shores now, and that was basically only what you need, and nothing you don't. Recall we had a 200-page thread about this already - not going to get anywhere new if this one goes that way. @onemanarmy hates new Land Rovers, got it. Many thousands of new and prospective Land Rover Defender owners do not. Next thread, next discussion.
That is a very puzzling statement. Manufacturers have to care what the end user wants. If they don't then vehicles don't sell. The hot selling models move quick. No one ever has to "settle" for a new vehicle. There are so many choices it's mind boggling.
I yet to find a situation where stock TRD off road Tacoma can do better than the stock discovery,
I own this truck for 4 years got it brand new, 68.000 miles now, About 80% off road miles.
Reliable? For sure,
But diesel discovery is nothing less, and I am pretty sure it will keep its value very well,
only time will tell
so far, I can confidently say, it outperforms Tacoma in every situation,
towing, ground clearance, approach and departure angles, gear ratios, fuel economy is amazing, 24 MPG vs 16MPG,
Fuel tank is 24 gallons Tacoma is 18 gallons
comfort is better, seating position is much better, Stock can take 33 inch tires, Tacoma can’t,
I can’t find a section to say Tacoma is better or even equivalent.
and this is my truck.