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Home > General > Any point in buying a diesel in the future? |
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MartynB Member Since: 08 Aug 2011 Location: Currently Rootless ! Posts: 1780 |
Difficult Question, because it does not just come down to fuel. It also encompasses the driveability of the car. For SUV type vehicles the range that maximum torque is developed in the Diesel engines makes them IMHO much easier to drive, and far better for towing, far better for using off road. So why did you pick a diesel in the first place.
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19th Feb 2017 11:52 am |
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Yorky Bob Member Since: 28 Apr 2015 Location: Yorkshire Posts: 4561 |
I will answer this in slightly different way.
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19th Feb 2017 11:57 am |
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le bouch Member Since: 15 Jan 2014 Location: UK Posts: 560 |
Agreed. I don't tow and very rarely off road. I bought my first LR (Disco Td300) as at the time we'd had a succession of harsh winters and I live in a hilly area that gets cut off in heavy snow. I chose diesel for the economy - I couldn't have afforded to run a petrol Disco! The SUV/ 4x4 bug bit - I wouldn't want my partner and kids in anything else now. We got a Disco 2 next and now of course the FL2 So for me if a petrol SUV (with 4x4 if poss) could be as economical as a diesel I'd be quite happy. I have a feeling diesels are going to get hammered (as any easy target is by this government) - there is also of course the environmental side to consider as well. It seems we were all lied to about diesels in that respect. |
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19th Feb 2017 12:23 pm |
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le bouch Member Since: 15 Jan 2014 Location: UK Posts: 560 |
I hope you're right but I'm not so sure. I see plenty of Evoques, RRS and DS round here. Interestingly though I don't know anyone who has actually _bought_ one. I have plenty of friends with luxury Land Rovers and they are _all_ financed in one way or another. |
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19th Feb 2017 12:28 pm |
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muddywheels Member Since: 02 Oct 2007 Location: East Riding of Yorkshire Posts: 939 |
I never thought after 16 years, 9 LRs and a Jag I'd be seen dead in anything else but after a run in a friends PHEV, some experience sharing and a spreadsheet exercise I took the plunge and no regrets
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19th Feb 2017 12:37 pm |
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seriesonenut Member Since: 04 Aug 2014 Location: Essex Posts: 62 |
Hi
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19th Feb 2017 5:55 pm |
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muddywheels Member Since: 02 Oct 2007 Location: East Riding of Yorkshire Posts: 939 |
You can run on pure electric or hybrid using petrol and electric
The batteries are never totally flat as it starts engine when down to 30% and recharge while driving I've not charged since Wednesday for first time since I got it and averaging 30-35mpg using petrol hybrid mode which is as good if not better than all my previous LR diesels Another feature I love is electric timed climate - warms car while in garage using electric with no fumes - used to have to get cold RRS out to use this feature so pointless Wanted a Series 2 LR since childhood but previously owned MY16 Disco Sport HSE TD4 Auto, MY13 RR Sport Black Edition TDV6 Auto, MY10 RR Sport HSE TDV6 Auto, 2007 Freelander 1 Freestyle TD4 Soft Top, 2009 Freelander 2 GS TD4 Auto, 2007 Freelander 2 GS TD4, 2004 Disco 2 Metropolis Auto, 2002 Disco 2 GS, 2000 Freelander 1 SE TD4 SW Still hoping for a S2 one day! Last edited by muddywheels on 19th Feb 2017 9:24 pm. Edited 1 time in total |
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19th Feb 2017 7:49 pm |
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Notanotherhobby Member Since: 22 Jun 2016 Location: Middlesbrough Posts: 19 |
I currently need a diesel for work as I need to access a number of premises that require vehicles to be non-petrol and I don't think electric vehicles would be permitted seeing as mobile phones, pagers and car remotes are deemed "banned" as not being intrinsically safe. Could be interesting. |
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19th Feb 2017 8:11 pm |
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Yorky Bob Member Since: 28 Apr 2015 Location: Yorkshire Posts: 4561 |
I currently need a diesel for work as I need to access a number of premises that require vehicles to be non-petrol and I don't think electric vehicles would be permitted seeing as mobile phones, pagers and car remotes are deemed "banned" as not being intrinsically safe. Could be interesting.
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19th Feb 2017 8:23 pm |
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Notanotherhobby Member Since: 22 Jun 2016 Location: Middlesbrough Posts: 19 |
Different...but boot looks too small, even smaller if it carries the spare!! |
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19th Feb 2017 9:15 pm |
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Stevie5tapes Member Since: 10 Jun 2012 Location: Brighouse, YORKSHIRE Posts: 1370 |
Just out of curiosity what industry do you work in? I would have thought a diesel car would pose similar issues to petrol cars for issues such as intrinsically safe electrics? Black MY2013 SD4 GS Auto, Wood Company Armrest, Freel2 sticker. Gone MY2010 Freelander 2 Manual TD4.e S, Alaska White. |
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19th Feb 2017 9:35 pm |
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Dan_NL Member Since: 30 Jul 2016 Location: Dutch Highlands Posts: 98 |
In the Netherlands car taxes are off the scale. If you drive a company car you get a percentage of the new price added to you taxable income. This actually is a "steal" . If you would get a RRS which costs around € 100.000 with some kit, these means it effectively costs you 22k added on you income, worsed case : € 800,- net. This is what I pay privately on diesel and roadtax only, for a 2006 D3... But for some years cars like the PHEV Mits costs 4%. So at 65k new this woul come down to €100 net. So hordes of people bought these as a company car. I know two persons like this, who deeply regret changing from there D3 to the PHEV. Now the tax advantage has eased of, and everybody is buying sensible cars again. And the hybrids ? They are all for export now... [ Freelander 2 TD4e MY10 Sport manual. SVR badge engineered ] SOLD
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20th Feb 2017 12:24 am |
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Lightwater Member Since: 21 Aug 2014 Location: Sydney Northern Beaches Posts: 4906 |
Aluminium smelters due to the absolutely massive magnetic field around the pot lines can't have petrol vehicles or any vehicle with any form of electrics. No pacemakers either, watches die both electronic & mechanical. Credit cards are wiped! Mobile phones are killed. Procrastination, mankind's greatest labour saving device! Acoustic insulation ARB TPMS 3xARB air compressors After cooler Air tank On-board OCD pressure air/water cleaning Additional 50L fuel Carpet in doors ABE 2x1kg Waeco 28L modified fridge Battery 4x26ah Solar 120w Victron MPPT 100/20 DC-DC 18amps 175amp jumper plug Awning 6x255/60R18 |
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20th Feb 2017 2:13 am |
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MartynB Member Since: 08 Aug 2011 Location: Currently Rootless ! Posts: 1780 |
good question , plus the exhaust manifolds, plus the cat, plus the disc brakes, once you get into ATEX compliance for vehicle operation in " zoned areas " you are in a different world, where the conversions to make the item safe can cost more than the vehicle. On the other hand some installations simply ban vehicles with HT circuits even if the vehicle does not go into the hazardous zone. The reason for this is that the product on that installation, say for example petrol on a refinery, or a flammable gas , , could be released and a volatile " cloud " could be present on any part of the installation and an HT circuit is seen to be a risk. On an industrial scale this is what ( probably ) happened in the Texas City catastrophe There is relatively cheap technology available ( about £4K£ ) to shut any vehicle down if an explosive atmosphere is detected , it is normally triggered at about 5% of the Lower Explosive Limits of the products on site, and a lot of big operators insist on this for vehicles which work on their sites, but it does not get away from surface temperature issues. I've paid upwards of £45,000 to have a £20,000 forklift made atex compliant But to put it in perspective it's all about risk and consequence, after all untrained operators ( like me me and you ) dispense petrol merrily every week into cars with HT ignition systems, but the worst consequence is losing a few cars and a forecourt, if you stand to lose a refinery for example, an HT circuit ban is just one of many layers of protection 2009 GS Auto Zermatt Silver - Sold June 21 after 10 years of ownership 2016 Subaru Outback SE 2.0 diesel SE Premium Lineartronic Sold 2024 after 8 years and 80k miles . Best Car I ever owned ! 2023 Toyota Hilux invincible X 2.8 Auto . |
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20th Feb 2017 2:36 am |
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