Its not unfair its based on easily accessed information - one example being: https://enginepatrol.com/range-rover-be ... rst-years/richbee wrote: ↑Thu Jun 13, 2024 11:44 amI think that's a bit unfair - I agree about the reliability, but the Rangerover is one of the best luxury vehicles in terms of a quiet cabin etc.Moxi wrote: ↑Thu Jun 13, 2024 10:35 amSorry Mart I can't agree with your comparison at all, I mean, both the Ioniq and the Kia will be significantly more reliable than a Range Rover which has a track record for poor mechanical and electrical reliability as well as an awful build quality. Add to this all the trips to the petrol station to fill up the gas guzzling engine and the regular and costly trips to the dealership for the services, noisy invasive engine noise in the cabin, etc and you can see that owning a Range Rover is far from an enjoyable experience.Mart wrote: ↑Thu Jun 13, 2024 10:10 am Totally agree Dan. I'm hoping that folk who want a Range Rover will be persuaded by something similar like the Kia EV9 (or its sister, the Hyundai Ioniq 9). At £65k and ~300 miles, I'd think that compares very well, like for like.
The Kia EV9 fully-electric 7-seater SUV.
Moxi
I don't understand the need to artificially bash SUVs.
I was watching the fully charged show yesterday, and Robert Lewellyn was banging on about SUVs - Yes the extra large ones have a much larger climate impact - but then he was saying how they break down much more and you "see them broken down all along the road side every time you drive" - What??!!
We need to be objective with our reasons for people to choose something other than petrol/diesel SUVs, otherwise our genuine climate related arguments could be ignored
I drive an EV6 and a Toyota RAV 2.2 ltr diesel which is my main towing vehicle (I do tow with the EV6 as well) and I haven't claimed to be anti one thing or another, all I have said is in my opinion based on personal experience and market research the LR isn't the best car for my £ and I couldn't with a clear conscience advocate buying one in any situation other than if someone came to me and said " I NEEEEEED A Land Rover in my life just because I want the badge......... which one is best" Then I would suck my teeth and go and do some more in depth research and advise them, but I would still probably also try and get them to consider other large diesel SUV alternatives based on reliability quality finish and price.
As for Robert L - yes he does bash SUV's but its all linked back to auditable facts such as environmental impact, reliability, cost to own, etc etc so you may not like the message for whatever your personal conscious and unconscious biases determine but the facts still remain the facts.
If you wanted to base the discussion on pure environmental principles then we should all be walking or cycling and no one should own a car or take flights etc but thats not often postulated as its too big a step for most folk to accept (me included).
Moxi