AndrewClarke
Adventurer
R_Lefebvre said:Out of curiousity, I looked for LC for sale in Ontario to compare them to Discos. I found only one likely candidate. IIRC, it was a 1996, with 180,000km. They wanted $18,000. I got my 2004 Disco with 76,000km for $19,000. I can't imagine the LC would have been a better vehicle. I mean, I know it's a Toyota, but come on.
It also emphasizes the point that, at least in Canada, LC's are VERY rare which makes them even harder to get parts for.
How could it POSSIBLY get any easier than that? If this was a pre-OBDII vehicle, I'd be totally screwed with a bum transmission.
The nice thing about being in Canada is that we get to buy the 15 year old Japanese import Cruisers. Did you look at those? They're a little older, and in about the same price bracket, but SWEEEET. I will agree though that for the same price, a 2004 Discovery is perhaps a more rational choice (other than the tdi vs v8 issue).
Land Cruisers haven't been sold in Canada for a number of years so if you want a newer one you have to pony up for the Lexus.
I'll give you an example of why electronics and off-roading are incompatible. This happened with my '96 D1 a few years ago, so also goes to show that the D1 is definitely NOT immune to showstopping electronic issues (no it's not all just non-working window switches).
I (actually my buddy) was driving up a rather steep incline when suddenly the engine shut off. It wouldn't restart, so after rolling back down the hill we spent quite a lot of time fiddling with it. It turns out that there was a software bug in the ECU that somehow was tripped, and the truck decided it had been in an accident. It shut off my EFI and my fuel pump, so without an expensive computer system to reset the ECU, there was nothing I could do to field repair the system. Maybe I could have replaced the ECU, I dunno.
I had to get towed out of a dry wash, and flatbedded for a couple hundred km thanks to the kindness of a stranger. My mechanic (West Coast Rovers) upgraded the software in the ECU with a newer version from Land Rover that didn't contain the bug.
Later I had another similar situation, that was rectified by pulling a fuse and waiting a while. This experience went a long way towards me deciding to replace my V8 D1 with a 200tdi 110.
- Andrew.