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Ex Member

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Posts posted by Ex Member

  1. 17 hours ago, Retroanaconda said:

    It’s a shame they ended up with a blingier model due to dealer incompetence. But then again there aren’t many folk who would turn down a $16k freebie!

    No doubt there will be more drama for them and keep those views coming in.

    The problem is 20" wheels and no rear diff lock are counter to the entire purpose of what they had planned.  They had wanted to maximize off road capability to show that you could get one that was good off road without being extremely expensive. They really missed the mark by accepting this one.

    • Like 3
  2. 17 hours ago, deep said:

    The Bronco looks promising, maybe a more direct competitor to the Defender due to having more space inside than a Wrangler?

    The Bronco is much cheaper than a Defender and speced much more for off road.  It will sell 20 times more than the Defender. The Defender is more a rich person's play thing.  There will be little crossover.

  3. That is a big difference.  Those are proper race car with very long suspension arms that prevent space for passengers.  In a full body vehicle, the arms are very short and the travel very limited.  That is the whole reason this entire thing is stupid.  Huge money for a crappy race car and a crappy supercar.

    If you do not understand these basic concepts, that is pretty scary.

  4. 3 hours ago, deep said:

    The problem could be the computer programmer who decided that light had to come on any time a cylinder misfires.  The environmental cost of chasing that problem has been a kazillion times higher than ignoring it - but you can't ignore a light which implies imminent danger!

    You think your brand new luxurymobile that you spent a normal person's yearly salary on should misfire and be ignored? Do you work for LR QC?  ;)

  5. 30 minutes ago, Bowie69 said:

    Inspectors are qualified, and have to retrain in a continuous process.

    Might I suggest a handful of imported defenders may not be representative, and I'll refer you to my previous comment about deep ends.

    It is not a "handful of Defenders".  It is ALL of them.  100%.  I've never seen a good truck come out of the UK.  Other countries, they are usually fine.  The UK, they are horrible.  My question is to if this is so regulated, how does it appear to be so common that vehicles get certificates while being unsafe?  You can't act like it is a rare thing.

  6. If you say so.  I've seen a dozen imported Defenders from the UK with recent MOTs that were death traps.  All failed in seconds when taken for the local inspections. A friend had one where you could stick you arm into the chassis and it had a month old MOT. It needed a new chassis to be able to register it.

    The original post on this thread shows how bad the system must be.

  7. 2 hours ago, Bowie69 said:

    They do, annually, for cars over 3 years old, and under 40.

    It is just that though, safety, stiff steering, or rattly engine and no-one cares until it stops them driving it.

    So brakes that don't work and steering that is broken are okay and somehow not considered safety issue?  Jesus, what a joke of a system. Are the mechanics licensed?

  8. All things you state are poor maintenance and can be corrected. What I always find amazing is that cars in the UK are supposed to have regular safety inspections....

    Unless it is a great deal and you can do the work yourself, run away.  Find one that is in good condition and inspected by a 3rd party that knows Defenders.  Steering should be light and tight.  Brakes should be firm and stop the vehicle with normal effort.  Clutch should be firm and heavier than a normal car. Accelerator should have linear power with travel (different than most modern vehicles where the power is non-linear).

  9. What happens is the lighter components of the diesel evaporate or burn and you are left with the heavier components mixed in with particulates.  The residue is a thick oil and you "think" it is sump oil.  This is happening when you are not getting complete combustion.  Due to being too cold, overfueling, retarded timing or a bad spray. Go and smell the exhaust when this is happening.  It will smell like diesel.  Burning sump oil smells very different.

    • Like 1
    • Thanks 1
  10. The inlet is not a lot different.  There is still higher pressure in the inlet port versus the valve cover.  The difference is not as much as the exhaust.  Any oil coming in here will be burned as well.

    The whole valve stem leak issue is not really a problem with diesels.  It is a hangover from petrol car experience where the the inlet ports run at high vacuum.

    Oil consumption if it happens is almost always rings or turbo seals.

     

    • Thanks 1
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