Home · FAQ · New Posts · My Posts · PMs · Search · Members · Members Map · Calendar · Profile · Donate · Register · Log In |
Home > Off Topic > anyone owned or towed with a Ford Kuga ? |
|
|
The Doctor Member Since: 09 Jul 2010 Location: Gallifrey Posts: 4615 |
Such a shame you got a Friday car. I can't speak for the Kuga but a guy near me has one and tows a caravan and he says it doesn't struggle with the weight.
|
||
27th Jul 2011 12:50 pm |
|
oldgeezer Member Since: 09 Apr 2011 Location: Wiltshire Posts: 1302 |
Thanks Doc
|
||
27th Jul 2011 1:36 pm |
|
ad210358 Member Since: 12 Oct 2008 Location: Here and There Posts: 7464 |
I don't know what van your tugging but the Kuga is a bit lighter than your Freely, you will be on the limit their or their abouts at 1500kgs. |
||
27th Jul 2011 1:53 pm |
|
oldgeezer Member Since: 09 Apr 2011 Location: Wiltshire Posts: 1302 |
It appears the Kerb weight for the 136bhp manual is 1700KG to i guess the 164BHP auto will be 1760ish KG and my caravan is 1600 KG.
|
||
27th Jul 2011 3:20 pm |
|
ad210358 Member Since: 12 Oct 2008 Location: Here and There Posts: 7464 |
Oldgeezer you are correct in the weight department, it was muted on here when they launched, I think our Mod looked at one briefly. I have just specced one up with options to bring it as close as I could to what I have and it came out a touch over £32k but at the end of the day it is just a Ford
|
||
27th Jul 2011 5:15 pm |
|
Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
It's interesting that the X Types were built on the same production line in Halewood as the Freelander, using largely the same engine built, in the same plant at Dagenham, yet you say they were perfectly reliable. Meanwhile you've had a great experience with the Fiesta, whose engine was also built at Dagenham. You are considering buying a Kuga, which is based on the same platform as the Freelander, with a engine also built at Dagenham. Most of the quality control processes at the ex Ford plant in Halewood (and its suppliers) will be exactly the same as they are at Ford's Kuga plant in Germany. Quality of manufacturing and parts sourcing is one thing, the quality of customer service departments is another. During the 30 years (and approximately 1,200,000 miles) I've driven, the worst customer service I have ever received has been from Ford's "customer service" department and some of their dealers. I would suggest that, overall, moving to a Kuga would give you a car that's about as likely to malfunction as another new Freelander, but with customer service from hell, rather than merely purgatory! If lack off road ability is not important to you, but reliability and reasonable towing ability is (and you can live with the looks), why not look at a Honda CRV? |
||
27th Jul 2011 5:36 pm |
|
mcphersonstrut Member Since: 21 Jul 2009 Location: In the land of 2 wheel drive and 60mpg Posts: 2164 |
|
||
27th Jul 2011 6:30 pm |
|
Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
I don't remember saying that! |
||
27th Jul 2011 6:34 pm |
|
mcphersonstrut Member Since: 21 Jul 2009 Location: In the land of 2 wheel drive and 60mpg Posts: 2164 |
You didn't..... I like the look of the Q3 though |
||
27th Jul 2011 6:42 pm |
|
MightyMildred Member Since: 16 Jan 2011 Location: County Durham Posts: 331 |
Thought about a Kuga before I took on Mildred in 08. Soooooo glad i chose Mildred! If I left the LR brand I'd head straight over to a Mitsubishi Shogun. A SWB will meet your towing requirements. My dad bought a new LWB elegance (sat nav, reversing cameras, hard drive for DVD/CDs, full leather, pulls my double horsebox with two big horses and you don't know it's there) for 29k... Compared with Lloyd who cost 34k...
|
||
28th Jul 2011 2:22 pm |
|
iain cooper Member Since: 27 Aug 2007 Location: north of Glasgow Posts: 1989 |
oldgeezer, have a look and test drive in the Subaru Forester Boxer diesel, really an impressive reliable package,
|
||
28th Jul 2011 3:11 pm |
|
NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
Subaru diesel reliable? Really? I'd like to see where you read that DPF, DMF and EGR faults coming up all over the place at 20-30k miles based on what I've heard. Current driveway contents:
|
||
28th Jul 2011 10:52 pm |
|
iain cooper Member Since: 27 Aug 2007 Location: north of Glasgow Posts: 1989 |
really ?? the boxer diesel ? news to me Iain |
||
29th Jul 2011 8:23 am |
|
NoDo$h Member Since: 27 May 2008 Location: fings go booooom. Posts: 490 |
Did some digging with my mate in the trade and seems it was very early ones and all ironed out, with the exception of DMF/Clutch issues, which still seem to prevail. Current driveway contents:
|
||
30th Jul 2011 8:47 am |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis