Buddy just told me he paid way over $100K for his 2020 Land Rover and it's now worth about $25K trade-in !?!?!/
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What's the reliability like on those things?
They were engineered to be sent to the moon. And left there.What is that old joke - 90% of Land Rovers made are still on the road. 10% made it to their final destinations.
Know some people who bought one and got rid of it about 6 months later. Made the switch to the new Toyota Landcruiser. They said it is not as comfortable, but no issues so far.
Read an article years ago about who was then a new CEO to Ford. Guy asked for a new vehicle every few weeks. The reason was to see what it was like driving their various models.I scratch my head why car manufacturers have cars with historically the same issues but don't fix them
Chrysler/Jeep has been known for transmission issues forever...
Toyota is known for the weird stuff... like window, door lock and windshield wiper motors..
Honda Pilot is known for being the loudest road noise car in its class
Stuff that Deming tools (TQC, Kaizen, Six Sigma) specifically addressed 40 years ago.. and presented it to all the major car companies.. only Japanese did anything with it
Car industry strategy (and has been for decades) : get the car sold even at lowest margins.. make your money in the service bay
Just avoid getting one that‘s being sold because it got flooded by Helene or some other storm.I'd 100% travel for a good deal. That sounds like a blast. Thanks for the tip!
So, the only info I could find is that Defenders and Land Rovers hold 73% of their value after 2 years. Full-on Range Rovers hold 53% of their value after 5.Buddy just told me he paid way over $100K for his 2020 Land Rover and it's now worth about $25K trade-in !?!?!/
So, the only info I could find is that Defenders and Land Rovers hold 73% of their value after 2 years. Full-on Range Rovers hold 53% of their value after 5.
Also, the warranties are pretty damned good.
New: 4/50K bumper to bumper + 7/100K powertrain
Certified Used: 7/100K bumper to bumper!
Sounds like a 2 or 3 year old certified Defender is a pretty damned good deal. My only fear is that my next car will probably make one or two round trips to Reno every year, and if it does break down, you know it will be in the middle of Wyoming. Along I-80, there is literally no dealers between Omaha and Salt Lake
I'm still thinking about the new Q5 plug in hybrid when I finally decide to give up my 5 year old Q5.
I mean, or station wagon. I never understood what "crossover" meant but I always thought of it as a wagon with some lift. (Now now, I'm not trying to get the unibody people all "My SUV is just as good even though its not body on frame! So simmer down)
Read an article years ago about who was then a new CEO to Ford. Guy asked for a new vehicle every few weeks. The reason was to see what it was like driving their various models.
The article talked about how each model was so different. For example, one morning he would get in and could not find the lights because it was different than the model he drove the week before. And these were all Fords.
Jeeps are money pits. You'd have to carry more cash than sense to buy one.As to Jeeps, I asked my mechanic years ago about buying a Cherokee.
He had a big smile and said it would be great for him. I went with the Acura at that point.