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Home > General > Jaguar Land Rover takes £3.1bn hit as demand stalls. FT |
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IanMetro Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Somerset BS21 Posts: 3133 |
It looks like that you will get your wish as VW are going to allow other manufacturers to use their platform. https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/industr...ech-rivals Perhaps you should become a coachbuilder and design and build an all electric Freelander or Defender. Oops, sorry too late, VW has already thought of that. https://europe.autonews.com/automakers/vw-...nder-rival FL2 XS SD4 Auto 2010 2012-2017 (21k - 91k miles) (MY2011) FL2 Metropolis SD4 Auto 2014 2017- (16k - 77k+ miles) (MY2015) Metro in its 11th Year of (Extended) LR Warranty / Full LR Service History (Expensive, but Trouble/Worry free - hopefully?) |
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7th Feb 2019 7:07 pm |
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SouthamFL2 Member Since: 08 Jan 2019 Location: Banbury Borders Posts: 432 |
Don't be facetious, I was referring to Jaguar and Land Rover sharing technology, not the manufacturer that caused the whole stack of cards to fall over in the first place with their dodgy Bosch ECU's.
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7th Feb 2019 7:16 pm |
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j77 Member Since: 26 Nov 2008 Location: Fife Posts: 2909 |
Dropping the Fl2 makes no difference, the cars have been selling and selling well but the bubble has to burst at some point.
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7th Feb 2019 7:21 pm |
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SouthamFL2 Member Since: 08 Jan 2019 Location: Banbury Borders Posts: 432 |
Got it in one! Let's not forget the pandering to the EU and the climate freaks. People don't buy Land Rovers for their green credentials, the same argument exists for those obsessed with MPG. You buy them for what they can do and where they can take you. If that doesn't tick the main boxes, then buy something Korean at a fraction ofmthe price. |
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7th Feb 2019 7:56 pm |
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Tigger Member Since: 30 Mar 2011 Location: L15KRD Posts: 2555 |
LR are not perfect, indeed quite a few (not all) of their recent designs have been shocking, but it’s the nearest thing we have to a serious, locally based, manufacturer. Meanwhile, many of the unhappy reliability and dealership stories could just as easily have come from any of the other major manufacturers; I’ve experienced none that have been better and plenty that have been a lot worse (Ford, Vauxhall, VW sales, Citroen, Ford, Citroen, Austin Rover and did I mention, Ford?! )
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7th Feb 2019 8:38 pm |
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richardk Member Since: 11 Jan 2009 Location: Norwich Posts: 909 |
Some very valid points there but I would add they have been very slow to bring the smaller disco sport to the market. I do find they all look so similar now though..a bit dull. Although oil dilution is common across many manufacturers however LRs mandated c18,000 mile service intervals. Customer are now finding that is not the reality. Could product development have picked that up? What caused the ticking B pillar in the DS? Why are the heater fans failing if the car isn't used for a few days? This alienates the customers and they don't come back. Why on a near £40K car is there no adjustable lumbar support? Undoubtedly things in China might be out of LR's control (but still predictable for an astute board of directors) but customers are fickle and spend their money wisely and it seems elsewhere now. Can't blame them..I am |
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7th Feb 2019 8:41 pm |
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dorsetfreelander Member Since: 20 Jul 2013 Location: Dorset Posts: 4354 |
In the case of the oil dilution saga, what counts as a short journey? 10 miles driving from cold in town traffic or perhaps 10 miles from cold along an open road at 60mph? 3 x FL1 2 manual + 1 auto 5 x FL2 4 manual + 1 auto Now Discovery Sport P250 MHEV SE |
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7th Feb 2019 9:00 pm |
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dondiddy Member Since: 16 Apr 2017 Location: Hamilton Posts: 753 |
Not sure what model you are referring to but my DS has adjustable lumbar support on the front seats, no issues with squeaks or rattles and the heater fan works as it should. Granted there is a "family" resemblance between models but I don`t think that they could ever be described as dull! |
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7th Feb 2019 9:07 pm |
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SouthamFL2 Member Since: 08 Jan 2019 Location: Banbury Borders Posts: 432 |
They (JLR) don't know themselves, and that is the cop-out! And if they do, then they are certainly keeping it under close wraps. "Driving Style" is a one-size-fits-all excuse for passing the buck. When you are paying upwards of £40k migrating from a Freelander to an Evoque or a DS or above, what is suddenly wrong with your previous perfectly normal and acceptable "driving style"? There is no logical answer, as they well know. Anything that they document is likely to lead to class action, therefore it appears to be far easier to blame the customer. Whilst some customers have undoubtedly bought the wrong vehicle for their journey types, an awful lot have also bought them with perfectly acceptable journey types, and are being blamed for poor engineering and design in the first place. Couple that with lackadaisical dealers trotting the corporate line, and suddenly the brand becomes resented. And all of sudden, we are back to the 80/90's again in the reliability polls. Simple really! Last edited by SouthamFL2 on 7th Feb 2019 10:11 pm. Edited 1 time in total |
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7th Feb 2019 9:07 pm |
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Jack frost Member Since: 21 Dec 2011 Location: UK Posts: 796 |
The joys of producing a grossly overpriced, badly engineered with shocking reliability |
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7th Feb 2019 9:54 pm |
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IanMetro Member Since: 11 Sep 2017 Location: Somerset BS21 Posts: 3133 |
The following is from a Subaru Forum
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7th Feb 2019 10:20 pm |
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SouthamFL2 Member Since: 08 Jan 2019 Location: Banbury Borders Posts: 432 |
Explain then why Jaguar XE/XF, F-Pace, D5 (AJ200 Ingenium powered) RRS SDV6/8 and FFRR SDV6/8 engines DO NOT suffer from diesel dilution, and the rest of the stable do?
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7th Feb 2019 10:38 pm |
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Tradewind 35 Member Since: 04 Dec 2012 Location: Cornwall Posts: 441 |
"Despite the havoc wreaked by Gerry McGovern and his unique line in pretentious pseudo-designer twaddle, I’ll be very sad to see JLR in trouble "
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7th Feb 2019 11:37 pm |
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Suckfish Member Since: 28 Feb 2018 Location: Southampton Posts: 215 |
The simple answer is that the DPF on the Jag models is located closer to the engine. When the car performs a regen cycle, the DPF gets hotter and thus burns off the cogged particles, The DPF need to get to 600deg C to turn the particles to soot. So in the Jags the DPF is situated close to the engine - in the DS the DPF is further away, and there is the key to the problem. The exhaust gas temperature drops below the target temp as it passes through the exhaust system, if it cannot perform the regen due to this reason it repeats and repeats. I think the solution many car manufactures have taken is wrong, a solution could have been to inject diesel into the exhaust system to allow for the hot burn regen. Thus no oil dilution issues. |
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8th Feb 2019 8:25 am |
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