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blackwolf



Member Since: 03 Nov 2009
Location: South West England
Posts: 17414

United Kingdom 2007 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 DCPU Stornoway Grey
I think in many ways the concept of the new Defender most closely matches the concept of the original (first generation) Range Rover.
Post #1053303 29th Nov 2024 9:00am
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Grenadier



Member Since: 23 Jul 2014
Location: The foot of Mont Blanc...
Posts: 5829

France 2011 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 DCPU Corris Grey
H1Tad wrote:
I hate to bring LR conversations back to my passion vehicle but I think the L663 situation is exactly what happened when the H2 was released by GM. The H1 guys baulked and said "thats not a real offroad heavy duty truck that can ford 60" of water! It doesn't even have beadlocks from the factory! *harumphharumphharumph*" - and we watched while the H2 (and H3) dominated sales and market share while we sat back and stewed in our animosity and utterly unjustified contempt.

Sure the H2 wasn't what we had wanted (the H1 Alpha was) but given the public's radical mood swings with regards to the H2, combined with hindsight, GM was entirely correct in the direction they went with it, and now they are welcomed in our littler Hummer community at events, trail rides, etc. On the used market, the H2's have actually rebounded (for good condition ones, which is tough).

Given how well the new Defender has performed in the market, I think LR knows it hit a home run with it. Whether or not an updated or more refined classic Rover/Defender would have outperformed it - we'll sadly never know. At least there's the Grenadier. (Dear Sir Ratcliffe, please respond to the daily letters I write to you asking you to resurrected the H1 like you did the classic Defender)


There is a big difference between the evolution of the H1 to the H2 and the <2016 Defender to the ND.

Everyone talks about the classic Defender’s ability off road, as if that was its only purpose/strong point. And from there they say the ND is a worthy successor because the Defender is once again at the top of the pile or at least in the top 3 off roading vehicles.

But the Defender wasn’t purely about its off road abilities, if only because it wasn’t (and hadn’t for some while been) the best. A modern Range Rover or Disco 4 with ‘correct tyres’ would trounce a classic Defender.

Where the classic Defender excelled, and indeed was almost unique at the time it was discontinued in 2016, was its ability to be modified, adapted, changed etc, to suit the purpose of any person, company or government. There are literally hundreds of variants, some DIY some built for purpose. No other vehicle maintained the ability to be adapted on the one hand into a special forces weapons platform, and then using the very same bare bones (chassis, engine, drive train, cab), be also turned into a cherry picker. Or an ambulance, or a utility truck, or a sewage pump, or etc etc. And what’s more, often supplied like that by LR or LRSV themselves.

The new Defender doesn’t offer any flexibility or adaptability at all. None. So the strongest suit of the <2016 Defender, that it could be anything to anybody, was ignored completely and instead replaced by yet another SUV, to add to the already 8 SUVs that JLR had in their stable. There is now no car on the market that offers what the classic Defender did in this regard (it waits to be seen if the Grenadier can offer it instead).

That wholesale change is very different to the H1 to H2 development, which in essence was reproducing the look of the H1 in a smaller (still huge to us Europeans), more comfortable and more user-friendly variant than its enormous full on military older brother. Clearly you can no longer stick a .50cal or TOW on the back, but then the H1 was never designed to be bought and used by civilians, unless you’re Arnie.

But the modularity was in the classic Defender’s DNA from its very earliest years and was a vehicle that was targeted AT civilians. That it was taken up by the armed forces proved was a great platform it was. In effect the reverse to the evolution of the Hummer. Now there’s not a military, government, NGO, utility company, or police force in the world that will buy the ND. The classic and new Defender are, aside from being able to go off road, chalk and cheese. They maintain no common DNA. Monsieur Le Grenadier

I've not been everywhere, but it's on my list.....

2011 Puma 110DC - Corris Grey
Post #1053304 29th Nov 2024 9:05am
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ruben



Member Since: 04 Feb 2021
Location: ASTURIAS
Posts: 201

Spain 
In short, someone said that the new Defender is the best Discovery built by Land Rover, is that so? Because, at this point in the century, I agree with that 100% Defender 110 SE I6 D250 23MY
ExDiscovery 3 TDV6 SE
Post #1053307 29th Nov 2024 9:14am
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Moo



Member Since: 01 Oct 2021
Location: UK
Posts: 1387

Ukraine 
Well you're all wrong! Ner Ner Eiger Grey MY23 D250 SE with bits. Known as Noddy.
Post #1053308 29th Nov 2024 9:22am
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ruben



Member Since: 04 Feb 2021
Location: ASTURIAS
Posts: 201

Spain 
Laughing Defender 110 SE I6 D250 23MY
ExDiscovery 3 TDV6 SE
Post #1053309 29th Nov 2024 9:24am
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LR Nuts



Member Since: 10 Aug 2022
Location: UK
Posts: 1130

 
blackwolf wrote:
I think in many ways the concept of the new Defender most closely matches the concept of the original (first generation) Range Rover.


so you are telling us, the New Defender will go on to be a CLASSIC.

I have never heard of a classic Defender, ever. Maybe they are not worthy ?
Post #1053311 29th Nov 2024 9:39am
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90 Dreamer



Member Since: 13 Jul 2019
Location: Oop North
Posts: 2161

United Kingdom 2016 Defender 90 Puma 2.2 HT Corris Grey
lightning wrote:
90 Dreamer wrote:
Disco 4 or 5 is a far nicer place to be.......supposed to be a Disco6 next year??


lt depends on what you mean by "far nicer"


quality / trim and practicality.........useable boot, etc (in that sense my Puma is far better!!)
Post #1053312 29th Nov 2024 9:42am
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blackwolf



Member Since: 03 Nov 2009
Location: South West England
Posts: 17414

United Kingdom 2007 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 DCPU Stornoway Grey
LR Nuts wrote:
blackwolf wrote:
I think in many ways the concept of the new Defender most closely matches the concept of the original (first generation) Range Rover.


so you are telling us, the New Defender will go on to be a CLASSIC.

I have never heard of a classic Defender, ever. Maybe they are not worthy ?


I'm not sure how you reached that conclusion from my words! I don't for a moment think the ND will ever become a classic, at least not a classic vehicle.
Post #1053320 29th Nov 2024 12:57pm
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blackwolf



Member Since: 03 Nov 2009
Location: South West England
Posts: 17414

United Kingdom 2007 Defender 110 Puma 2.4 DCPU Stornoway Grey
Grenadier wrote:
... Where the classic Defender excelled, and indeed was almost unique at the time it was discontinued in 2016, was its ability to be modified, adapted, changed etc, to suit the purpose of any person, company or government. There are literally hundreds of variants, some DIY some built for purpose. No other vehicle maintained the ability to be adapted on the one hand into a special forces weapons platform, and then using the very same bare bones (chassis, engine, drive train, cab), be also turned into a cherry picker. Or an ambulance, or a utility truck, or a sewage pump, or etc etc. And what’s more, often supplied like that by LR or LRSV themselves.

The new Defender doesn’t offer any flexibility or adaptability at all. None. So the strongest suit of the <2016 Defender, that it could be anything to anybody, was ignored completely and instead replaced by yet another SUV, to add to the already 8 SUVs that JLR had in their stable. There is now no car on the market that offers what the classic Defender did in this regard (it waits to be seen if the Grenadier can offer it instead).
...


The perfect opportunity to repost the two photos below, noting that the first is from the days of leaf springs rather than coils.

The first photo was taken circa 1965 or 1966 and shows what is essentially one vehicle configured for no fewer than 27 clearly different, distinct, and very functional utility roles.

The second photo is the 2020 equivalent and shows eight "different" vehicles which are virtually indistinguishable from each other both in terms of appearance and function, and none of them could be used for more than perhaps two of the purposes shown in the earlier photo.

I'm not saying that the vehicles in either photo are better or worse that those in the other, this is just to emphasise the seismic shift in purpose. Where the Land-Rover was once the "world's most versatile vehicle", the Defender is now, in the words of the IPR owner, "an adventure brand".


Click image to enlarge




Click image to enlarge
Post #1053326 29th Nov 2024 1:23pm
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Chicken Drumstick



Member Since: 17 Aug 2020
Location: Near MK
Posts: 749

United Kingdom 
blackwolf wrote:
I think in many ways the concept of the new Defender most closely matches the concept of the original (first generation) Range Rover.

Yes, this statement would also be true for the 1989 Discovery 1.
Post #1053335 29th Nov 2024 2:45pm
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Chicken Drumstick



Member Since: 17 Aug 2020
Location: Near MK
Posts: 749

United Kingdom 
LR Nuts wrote:
blackwolf wrote:
I think in many ways the concept of the new Defender most closely matches the concept of the original (first generation) Range Rover.


so you are telling us, the New Defender will go on to be a CLASSIC.

I have never heard of a classic Defender, ever. Maybe they are not worthy ?

You are getting muddled. LR branded the original Range Rover as "Classic" when it was sold alongside the then new P38a.

Hence you have RRC...
Post #1053336 29th Nov 2024 2:47pm
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Chicken Drumstick



Member Since: 17 Aug 2020
Location: Near MK
Posts: 749

United Kingdom 
Laughing



Click image to enlarge



I'm still not hating on the new one. Only its name. And being honest I thought this looked great for a "Defender Sport" concept (arguably much better looking than what we actually got).

Post #1053337 29th Nov 2024 2:57pm
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H1Tad



Member Since: 20 Jul 2024
Location: Maine
Posts: 126

United States 
Please bear in mind, I'm speaking purely from a US based market perspective...

Quote:
The new Defender has totally killed Disco 5 sales globally. And also impacted RRS sales, which are also down.


Speculative. IMO the Disco over here was dead the moment its less-than-appealing exterior was unveiled. It was never a popular look. While sales of discos might have transferred to the new Defender - there's no way to tell. In the US market, there is a huge, almost never-ending supply of SUV's that do what the disco did except better, cheaper and more attractively. I'd argue that those dramatic drops in Disco and other JLR model sales would have happened regardless of whether the new Defender happened or not.

Quote:
Everyone talks about the classic Defender’s ability off road, as if that was its only purpose/strong point. And from there they say the ND is a worthy successor because the Defender is once again at the top of the pile or at least in the top 3 off roading vehicles.


Again, US perspective here, but the "Classic" Defenders we had (and still have) over here are the "NAS" Spec which command a huge price premium due to their relative rarity. They are expensive vehicles but also extremely compromised in order to tilt its capabilities towards the offroad abilities. Over here, nobody, relatively speaking is using a Land Rover (of any type) in a commercial or agricultural way. And again, from a US perspective, the L663 is not one of the top 3 offroad vehicles. Not even top 5 I'd guess. Off the top of my head we have the Wrangler in its infinite configurations, Gladiators, Broncos, 4Runners, Land Cruisers (in their various configurations including Lexus brands), All of the Raptors (Ranger, F150, Bronco), the lesser Jeeps... the New Defender is certainly capable and comfortable, but its offroad performance doesn't stack up against the big hitters over here that can be equipped with sliders, full lockers, factory lifts and 37's from the factory. A vehicle's offroad performance is purely subjective of course.

Quote:
Where the classic Defender excelled, and indeed was almost unique at the time it was discontinued in 2016, was its ability to be modified, adapted, changed etc, to suit the purpose of any person, company or government.


Not too different from the H1. The volumes are different of course (Because the price of these models wasn't competitive), but the "civilian" version had a commercial line of trucks that were infinitely adaptable, from ambulances, to fire trucks, to excavators and bucket trucks (cherry pickers). That doesn't even get into the loads of demil'd HMMWV's that have been repurposed for law enforcement and other duties. The whole platform was designed from the onset to be a swiss army knife of capabilities. Still waiting on the Hawkeye howitzer to be delivered to my front door! (Yes we can order it and no, we don't need a license, only a large bank account). My friend Blake just sold a 1994 H1 (pictured) that lived its whole life as a firetruck, and he converted it to a little danty little offroader. My first H1 was restomodded by a shop in SoCal that worked on only H1's and Classic Defenders. They are truly the same vehicle with different accents.


Click image to enlarge


Quote:
That wholesale change is very different to the H1 to H2 development, which in essence was reproducing the look of the H1 in a smaller (still huge to us Europeans), more comfortable and more user-friendly variant than its enormous full on military older brother. Clearly you can no longer stick a .50cal or TOW on the back, but then the H1 was never designed to be bought and used by civilians, unless you’re Arnie.


It was the successor to the H1, which was NOT the military version (HMMWV). It was a civilian version, that was very much in line with the NAS Defender as far as creature comfortability. As for sticking .50cal on top, clearly you've not heard of Texas Rolling with laughter Serious, my friend Mark has a .50cal mount on the rollcage of his H1. The H1 (which is NOT the HMMWV) was definitely, from its onset, designed to be bought and driven by civilians. It was just very compromised in areas that the mass market didn't appreciate. In other words, exactly like the NAS Defenders.

As for no military or NGO's buying the New Defender - likewise with the H2. Nobody ever bought it for commercial or agricultural uses except for getting business advertising wraps put on. There was (and still is) a weird tax loophole over here if you buy a vehicle > 6000lbs GVRW you can deduct part of its cost off your business taxes so a lot of companies bought H2's for rolling advertisement billboards. I have seen the new Defender being used as an ambulance in New York City for what its worth.

The situations are more alike than you think - even the unceremonious dropping of the beloved original model at the expense of its seemingly "inferior" successor. At least from the US perspective - and especially the perspective of a H1 daily driver owner who also has a New Defender (and maybe soon a Grenadier or a classic Defender, the FJ is getting rusty) Smile

Quote:
I just don't want to be seen driving in one! Laughing


Just to put a point on how different our car markets are... the #1 selling vehicle model for what seems like decades - is the Ford F150 pickup truck. People buy them even if they don't even use the pickup bed or tow anything - just because they are so comfortable and practical. 2022 Defender 110 SE P400 Tasman Blue Expedition and Cold weather package
2003 Hummer H1 P400 Firehouse Red
2008 Toyota FJ Cruiser
Post #1053342 29th Nov 2024 4:17pm
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lightning



Member Since: 23 Apr 2009
Location: High Peak, Derbyshire
Posts: 2808

United Kingdom 
Grenadier wrote:
H1Tad wrote:
I hate to bring LR conversations back to my passion vehicle but I think the L663 situation is exactly what happened when the H2 was released by GM. The H1 guys baulked and said "thats not a real offroad heavy duty truck that can ford 60" of water! It doesn't even have beadlocks from the factory! *harumphharumphharumph*" - and we watched while the H2 (and H3) dominated sales and market share while we sat back and stewed in our animosity and utterly unjustified contempt.

Sure the H2 wasn't what we had wanted (the H1 Alpha was) but given the public's radical mood swings with regards to the H2, combined with hindsight, GM was entirely correct in the direction they went with it, and now they are welcomed in our littler Hummer community at events, trail rides, etc. On the used market, the H2's have actually rebounded (for good condition ones, which is tough).

Given how well the new Defender has performed in the market, I think LR knows it hit a home run with it. Whether or not an updated or more refined classic Rover/Defender would have outperformed it - we'll sadly never know. At least there's the Grenadier. (Dear Sir Ratcliffe, please respond to the daily letters I write to you asking you to resurrected the H1 like you did the classic Defender)


There is a big difference between the evolution of the H1 to the H2 and the <2016 Defender to the ND.

Everyone talks about the classic Defender’s ability off road, as if that was its only purpose/strong point. And from there they say the ND is a worthy successor because the Defender is once again at the top of the pile or at least in the top 3 off roading vehicles.

But the Defender wasn’t purely about its off road abilities, if only because it wasn’t (and hadn’t for some while been) the best. A modern Range Rover or Disco 4 with ‘correct tyres’ would trounce a classic Defender.

Where the classic Defender excelled, and indeed was almost unique at the time it was discontinued in 2016, was its ability to be modified, adapted, changed etc, to suit the purpose of any person, company or government. There are literally hundreds of variants, some DIY some built for purpose. No other vehicle maintained the ability to be adapted on the one hand into a special forces weapons platform, and then using the very same bare bones (chassis, engine, drive train, cab), be also turned into a cherry picker. Or an ambulance, or a utility truck, or a sewage pump, or etc etc. And what’s more, often supplied like that by LR or LRSV themselves.

The new Defender doesn’t offer any flexibility or adaptability at all. None. So the strongest suit of the <2016 Defender, that it could be anything to anybody, was ignored completely and instead replaced by yet another SUV, to add to the already 8 SUVs that JLR had in their stable. There is now no car on the market that offers what the classic Defender did in this regard (it waits to be seen if the Grenadier can offer it instead).

That wholesale change is very different to the H1 to H2 development, which in essence was reproducing the look of the H1 in a smaller (still huge to us Europeans), more comfortable and more user-friendly variant than its enormous full on military older brother. Clearly you can no longer stick a .50cal or TOW on the back, but then the H1 was never designed to be bought and used by civilians, unless you’re Arnie.

But the modularity was in the classic Defender’s DNA from its very earliest years and was a vehicle that was targeted AT civilians. That it was taken up by the armed forces proved was a great platform it was. In effect the reverse to the evolution of the Hummer. Now there’s not a military, government, NGO, utility company, or police force in the world that will buy the ND. The classic and new Defender are, aside from being able to go off road, chalk and cheese. They maintain no common DNA.


All valid points, to an extent.
But the new Defender is the most successful vehicle Land Rover have ever produced in terms of sales. Over four years after being introduced there's still a 6-9 month waiting list on some versions.

And it is a highly capable 4x4. While obviously not as adaptable as the old version (l've owned five of those) it has a large following already.

How many Defenders do you think Land Rover would have sold, had they produced a vehicle like the Grenadier.
And obviously had they done so, we likely wouldn't have had the Grenadier. At least now we've got a choice.
Had the Grenadier been available as a Commercial Vehicle back in 2022 then l would have had one instead of my Defender Commercial.
Post #1053353 29th Nov 2024 5:45pm
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LR Nuts



Member Since: 10 Aug 2022
Location: UK
Posts: 1130

 
blackwolf wrote:



Click image to enlarge




I'm told these vehicles are only of value ............................ If you have the cardboard boxes they came in.

Rolling with laughter Rolling with laughter
Post #1053362 29th Nov 2024 7:19pm
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