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Car Forum / Land Rover Cars / December 2007

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Disco advice needed.

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John Stokes - 26 Dec 2007 07:32 GMT
Hi, Happy Christmas to all on the forum.

My 110 is off for an engine transplant tomorrow, but I'm considering sorting
out the other bits like doors and possibly selling it and swapping for a
Disco.  This is due to the need to transport an aged mother in law for the
odd trip out.

I've noticed that there is a hell of a difference in price between Defenders
and Discos and have been told that they are prone to rear floor collapse.
The other issue is obviously going to be fuel consumption. My 300 TDi 110
CSW Defender has been consistently returning 27-30mpg since I've had it, but
what could I expect from a Disco?

I drive 16 miles to work through a mixture of country lanes and urban
traffic every day, but most of my non-work related mileage is on clearer
roads and motorways.

I would welcome the views of anyone who has experience of both.
                            Cheers, John
SteveG - 26 Dec 2007 10:21 GMT
> Hi, Happy Christmas to all on the forum.
>
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> I would welcome the views of anyone who has experience of both.
>                              Cheers, John

Hi John and Marry Xmas to you.

It's true that older Discoveries can suffer from rear floor rot but I'm
on my fourth one and haven't suffered with it yet (he says with crossed
fingers). The prudent thing to do is to pull up the boot carpet and
sound-proofing before you buy and take a peek. I'm not aware of this
problem being common on Series 2 Disco's.

You should achieve the same, if not better, fuel mileage. The engines
are  much the same (although IIRC the Discovery one is tuned slightly
higher to give a few extra BHP) and the Disco has higher gearing than
the 110. My last 300Tdi never gave me less than 30mpg and averaged 34
over the period that I had it. An auto will, of course, be considerably
less and my current one struggles to better 25mpg. If thrift is an issue
then don't even consider a V8 or MPi!

For comfort and on-road driveability the Discovery is (IMHO) streets
ahead of the Defender. Off tarmac they can hold their own with any other
unmodified Land Rover of similar age.

Hope this has been of some help :-)

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Regards

Steve G

Austin Shackles - 26 Dec 2007 13:40 GMT
>For comfort and on-road driveability the Discovery is (IMHO) streets
>ahead of the Defender. Off tarmac they can hold their own with any other
>unmodified Land Rover of similar age.

Comfort, yes; but I do like the way the 110 handles.  Stiffer sprung than
the disco or RR, and on the right tyres you can fling it around in a manner
you'd never believe from looking at it.
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Austin Shackles.  www.ddol-las.net  my opinions are just that
Travel The Galaxy!  Meet Fascinating Life Forms...
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SteveG - 27 Dec 2007 21:23 GMT
>> For comfort and on-road driveability the Discovery is (IMHO) streets
>> ahead of the Defender. Off tarmac they can hold their own with any other
[quoted text clipped - 3 lines]
> the disco or RR, and on the right tyres you can fling it around in a manner
> you'd never believe from looking at it.

That may be the case, Austin, but in every other respect the Discovery
is a better drive than a 110. The taller gearing makes it a more
leisurely vehicle to drive without degrading acceleration to any
noticeable degree. Whilst the softer springing does give the impression
of being a bit wallowy on bends you soon get used to it and can throw
the vehicle around with complete confidence. It also gives a smoother
ride over our poorly maintained A and B roads

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Regards

Steve G

Richard - 26 Dec 2007 11:07 GMT
Hi, and a marry Xmas to you too,

I have no experience whatsoever with Defenders or Series Land Rovers,
but my Disco 1 (1998) 300 Tdi auto averages a 30 to 34 mpg (10 to 12
kilometres per litre), its very best being a staggering 40 mpg (14 km/
l). Part secondary roads, part motorways, hardly any urbain traffic.

Regards,
Richard

On Dec 26, 8:32 am, "John Stokes" <wildlifeincam...@tiscali.co.uk>
wrote:
> Hi, Happy Christmas to all on the forum.
>
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
> I would welcome the views of anyone who has experience of both.
>                              Cheers, John
Dave Liquorice - 26 Dec 2007 22:06 GMT
> My 300 TDi 110 CSW Defender has been consistently returning 27-30mpg
> since I've had it, but what could I expect from a Disco?

My DII TD5 has a long term (3 years) average of 29.4mpg, just dropped back
from 29.5. Mixture of 5 mile AM school run, 40 miles RT A road shopping
trips and longer (200 mile RT) motorway trunk road cruising at 100kmh
(approx 62mph).

It's just dropped back because the rear brakes a binding just a little
bit, see another post...

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Cheers                                              new5pam@howhill.com
Dave.                                             pam is missing e-mail

 
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