Driving automobiles

Land Rover / Discovery

Hello all,  I’m thinking about getting the new Land Rover Discovery.
I was wondering if anybody has any information/knowledge about this
vehicle.  I would also like to know about the reliability of the cars
made by this company.  Does anybody own one?  It seems to compare
favorably with the Toyota Land Cruiser (personal opinion) but of
course there is no way to judge the quality or durability since it’s a
new model.  Thanks for any help/info.  Paul W.

Comments (10)




10 Responses to “Land Rover / Discovery”

  1. admin says:

    I’m impressed with what I’ve seen of the Discovery at car shows, but as a
    longtime Land Cruiser owner, I gotta tell you that there’s nothing built
    like a Cruiser. It _will_ get you there.

    Disclaimer: I owned two FJ40′s, not the big wagons that they sell today.
    However, nothing in the car press says the new Toys are any less rugged
    (though they are _much_ more civilized inside) than their predecessors.

  2. admin says:

    British built true "Bulldog" made in Coventry, England – unstoppable. Knocks
    the socks off other offroaders !!!

    Get one – you won’t regret it.

    Tim

    In article <328ktv$…@news.mic.ucla.edu>, <cwaz…@agsm.ucla.edu> writes:
    > Path:

    liffe.com!uknet!bhamcs!bham!warwick!lyra.csx.cam.ac.uk!doc.ic.ac.uk!agate!howla
    nd.reston.ans.net!europa.eng.gtefsd.com!library.ucla.edu!news.mic.ucla.edu!agsm
    !cwazzan

    - Hide quoted text — Show quoted text -

    > From: cwaz…@agsm.ucla.edu (Christopher Paul Wazzan)
    > Newsgroups: rec.autos.driving
    > Subject: Land Rover / Discovery
    > Date: 9 Aug 1994 19:20:31 GMT
    > Organization: The Anderson School at UCLA
    > Lines: 13
    > Message-ID: <328ktv$…@news.mic.ucla.edu>
    > NNTP-Posting-Host: risc.agsm.ucla.edu
    > Keywords: range land rover discovery
    > X-Newsreader: NN version 6.5.0 #3 (NOV)

    > Hello all,  I’m thinking about getting the new Land Rover Discovery.
    > I was wondering if anybody has any information/knowledge about this
    > vehicle.  I would also like to know about the reliability of the cars
    > made by this company.  Does anybody own one?  It seems to compare
    > favorably with the Toyota Land Cruiser (personal opinion) but of
    > course there is no way to judge the quality or durability since it’s a
    > new model.  Thanks for any help/info.  Paul W.

  3. admin says:

    In article <328ktv$…@news.mic.ucla.edu> cwaz…@agsm.ucla.edu  

    (Christopher Paul Wazzan) writes:
    > Hello all,  I’m thinking about getting the new Land Rover Discovery.
    > I was wondering if anybody has any information/knowledge about this
    > vehicle.  I would also like to know about the reliability of the cars

    Check out the latest issue of Car and Driver.  They review the ’94 Land  
    Rover Discovery…  Quite favorably, I might add.

    Later!

  4. admin says:

    MICROG…@msmail01.liffe.com writes:
    >British built true "Bulldog" made in Coventry, England – unstoppable. Knocks
    >the socks off other offroaders !!!
    >Get one – you won’t regret it.
    >Tim

     Can you say "Hummer"? I knew you could…

  5. admin says:

    In article <336dbu$…@s.ms.uky.edu>, mi…@ms.uky.edu (Stephen D. Grant)
    writes:

    >>British built true "Bulldog" made in Coventry, England – unstoppable.
    >>Knocks the socks off other offroaders !!!
    >>Get one – you won’t regret it.
    >>Tim
    >Can you say "Hummer"? I knew you could…

    Hardly in the same league, is it?  I mean, how many gallons to the mile
    does the Hummer get, does it have connoly leather seats, and wouldn’t the
    ride cause the CD player to keep skipping?  (NOTE:  Lots of tongue placed
    firmly in cheek humour here, don’t bother flaming back)

  6. admin says:

    >>> … [ praise of the Land Rover Discovery ] …
    >>Can you say "Hummer"? I knew you could…
    >Hardly in the same league, is it?  I mean, how many gallons to the mile
    >does the Hummer get, does it have connoly leather seats, and wouldn’t the
    >ride cause the CD player to keep skipping?  (NOTE:  Lots of tongue placed
    >firmly in cheek humour here, don’t bother flaming back)

    Sorry for the newbie question: what’s a "Hummer"?  I’ve been looking
    at the Land Rover Discovery (in my dreams) so if I’m missing something
    comparable, I’d love to know.

    Thanks,

                                    Alex
    —————————————————————————-
    Alex Bronstein                                Xerox Desktop Document Systems
    a…@adoc.xerox.com                                           1-415-813-6979
    —————————————————————————-

  7. admin says:

    In article <ALEX.94Aug25162…@chive.parc.xerox.com> a…@adoc.xerox.com

    (Alex Bronstein) writes:
    > Sorry for the newbie question: what’s a "Hummer"?  I’ve been looking
    > at the Land Rover Discovery (in my dreams) so if I’m missing something
    > comparable, I’d love to know.

    "Hummer" is the nickname of the HMMWV, or "High Mobility Multipurpose
    Wheeled Vehicle" — the successor to the Jeep as the all-purpose
    vehicle of the U.S. armed forces.  (I understand that the Army
    folks dislike the nickname due to its sexual connotations,
    prefferring "Humvee" instead.)

    The Hummer is a large, slab-sided vehicle with enormous ground
    clearance, a vertical windshield, and a GM diesel V-8 engine.
    It was originally developed by the AM General division of
    what was then American Motors, but is now built by LTV of
    F-8 Crusader and A-7 Corsair fame.  It’s not really comparable
    to the Discovery at all.  The Hummer is a no-compromise vehicle,
    rather Spartan inside, with limited freeway utility according
    to what the car maghazines say.

    Geoff


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    geo…@netcom.com               +  DoD #0996  +                 California
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  8. admin says:

    Think about hummer as BMX or dirt bike. I drove 4 when they are
    pushing to sell. Went up and down 45 degree slope, over ditch as
    wide as two feet, climb rock stair as high as 50 inches. Nice
    horse in the field.

    Engine lay between driver and passenger. Take up interior
    space such that it can go over 5 feet of water. Not comfortable
    at all. But take you through areas that’s even more uncomfortable.

  9. admin says:

    In article <1994Aug31.202951….@bnr.ca>, chun…@bnr.ca (Chung Lu)
    writes:

    >climb rock stair as high as 50 inches.

    If I’m not mistaken a 50 inch stair riser would be 50" Vert. wich would
    mean the Tires have to be 100" to roll over them.  The bumper height is
    less than 30" on a Hummer.  I drove one in my Infantry unit in the ARMY
    for 6 months and I KNOW it will go many places a Land Rover or Jeep won’t,
    but it WILL NOT climp 50" stairs.

    Sean Alexander

  10. admin says:

    In article r…@search01.news.aol.com, techliv…@aol.com (TECHLiveSR) writes:

    > If I’m not mistaken a 50 inch stair riser would be 50" Vert. wich would
    > mean the Tires have to be 100" to roll over them.  The bumper height is
    > less than 30" on a Hummer.  I drove one in my Infantry unit in the ARMY
    > for 6 months and I KNOW it will go many places a Land Rover or Jeep won’t,
    > but it WILL NOT climp 50" stairs.

    > Sean Alexander

    While I agree that 50" is not a realistic step to go over, I will say that
    it is QUITE easy to climb a step taller than your tire.  All you need to do
    is approach it at an angle, turn the front wheel out of the wheel well, and
    let it grab the rock face, and up you go.  Keep turning into it, and the
    other side will lift right up with it.

    I have watched many drivers, and have done this myself, get over obstacles
    that seem impossible to climb.  I attend the Easter Jeep Safari in Moab, Utah,
    and routinely watch Jeeps and other trucks climb steps that are 36-40" high,
    and some higher than that, with only 33" tires.  Same thing happens here in
    the Sierra Nevada on the Rubicon.

    Jeeps, and the Hummers, which are open to the front, may indeed be able to
    attack a rock face fairly straight on and get over it.  My Bronco II requires
    that I turn the tire out and grab it more from the side.

    This is SOP for offroading.  Look at any of the magazines about driving off
    road.  They all tell you to aim a tire for the rock, and go over it, rather
    than around it.  Done properly, you can get through extremely narrow vertical
    spaces, or over very large boulders, without even scratching a rocker panel.

    Tom