Home > General & Technical (L663) > LR to build next Defender in India |
|
|
JWL Member Since: 26 Oct 2011 Location: Hereford Posts: 3443 |
They'll be the ones that move to India or Ceylon and look for PGTips in the shops
|
||
26th Jan 2012 10:43am |
|
ZeDefender Member Since: 15 Sep 2011 Location: Munich Posts: 4731 |
Tell someone you love them today because life is short. But shout it at them in German because life is also terrifying and confusing... |
||
26th Jan 2012 11:42am |
|
22900013A Member Since: 23 Dec 2010 Location: Oxfordshire Posts: 3150 |
Errr, you may well have a point, it may well be a bit xenophobic, but it will still happen. Where are the Indian manufactured cars on todays roads in the UK? Have we ever seen an Indian manufactured car here? The only one I can think of is the Cityrover and we know what happened to the Rover company shortly afterwards. People do not see white goods in the same way as cars, they just aren't the same thing. I'd strongly suggest having a look at what people have to drive in India before saying the Defender will be any better made over there. They drive lorries with wooden cabs still! I do agree though that JLR has work to do when it comes to QC, look at that JD Power survey thingy... 2011 110 USW 1973 Series III 1-Ton 1972 Series III 1-Ton Cherrypicker 1969 IIA 1-Ton 1966 IIA 88" |
||
26th Jan 2012 1:05pm |
|
MartinK Member Since: 02 Mar 2011 Location: Silverdale (Lancashire/Cumbria Border) Posts: 2665 |
Hmmm - I am a bit of a nationalist, and try to buy products with as much British content as possible, keeps jobs in UK, reduces the peeps on the dole, hence reduces my tax liability, and keeps my neighbour and me in a job... I'll put back New Zealand Lamb on the supermarket shelf and look for the British stuff (afterall our fields are full of it...and maybe buying local helps my "food miles" so it's good for the local farmer, the ozone layer and my tax bill!).
There was a lovely line in the Today newspaper a while back (aimed at Scotland)...I quote:
... whilst this may be a bit naive, I like the sentiment, we don't buy much of our own stuff as it is! At least we may get complimentary poppadums with the 12000 mile service As said before, better look after that chassis... Defender "Puma" 2.4 110 County Utility (possibly the last of the 2.4's) |
||
26th Jan 2012 1:19pm |
|
ZeDefender Member Since: 15 Sep 2011 Location: Munich Posts: 4731 |
Lord bless you Sir Tell someone you love them today because life is short. But shout it at them in German because life is also terrifying and confusing... |
||
26th Jan 2012 1:26pm |
|
ZeDefender Member Since: 15 Sep 2011 Location: Munich Posts: 4731 |
I fully support an international marketplace - it would just be nice if Britain still had something tangible to trade... Tell someone you love them today because life is short.
But shout it at them in German because life is also terrifying and confusing... |
||
26th Jan 2012 1:46pm |
|
Pam W Member Since: 25 Oct 2011 Location: North Yorkshire Posts: 1169 |
I try to buy British agricultural produce. It really makes sense for many reasons. Some things you haven't much choice, especially if you want out of season stuff.
Don't do Danish Bacon OR New Zealand lamb.Ever. Would rather go without. My other half mentioned something about brown sauce earlier.He remembers only too well when HP Sauce changed from being made in Birmingham to being made in the Netherlands. I refused to buy it. Unfortunately, it is the best and only brown sauce for bacon and sausage butties and eventually I had to succumb and begin purchasing again. I will not buy Terry's Chocolate Orange any more though. Firstly it was a crime to close the Terry's factory in York and send manufacturing abroad. That, coupled with that an the moving of some of the Rowntree (Nestle) production abroad pretty much brought the death knell to the sugar beat agri-industy in the Vale of York, which supplied much of the sugar for the chocolate. Downward spiral, knock on effects, jobs lost, etc. Not to be underestimated.... I got an orange given last year so ate it begrudgingly but as I found out it doesn't taste anything like as good - different water, different milk, different sugar... who knows.... |
||
26th Jan 2012 2:11pm |
|
dnorrishill Member Since: 15 Jul 2011 Location: Hampshire Posts: 616 |
Wonder if it a ploy to get government subsidy to build it here? Especially as current government want to boost UK manufacturing to help balance of payments.
Also reading the article again they say "some models" so maybe they will do what they are doing with Freelander - building the ones for Asian markets in India, but ones for US and Europe in the UK? |
||
26th Jan 2012 2:34pm |
|
Glynparry25 Member Since: 16 Feb 2009 Location: Miserable Midlands Posts: 3015 |
It is good to hear that people are buying British, but unfortunately you are in the tiny minority, plus, where do you shop? Tesco, Morrisons..... Remember all these supermarkets aren't British, and they pay the farmers all for their produce. Only way you are really supporting British is or buying from a local farm shop
I have always bought British.... The first new car I bought was a Rover 25..... I justified the fact it cost £500 over the price of a Pug 306 because it was British.... but 80% of the people I spoke to after said they would have saved the £500 and bought French.... and lets not get onto European build quality. I had ONE fault in 5 years 82,000 miles of ownership where my brother had 7 recalls in the first year on his Pug 206. Alfa Romeo, fiat...... I think they use wood instead of copper in their electrical systems!! Peugot, Renault, Citroen..... Great for 3-5 years and then they start falling apart Saab...... Who are they again? Even Audi are producing quite a lot of problem cars at the moment. Considering that Indian, Malaysian cars were unheard of 5 years ago and now they are offering 7 year warranties which is taking the market by storm.... How many KIA, SANGYONG, Daewoo cars are you now seeing on the road compared to 3 years ago?...... every year they are selling more and more all because the general British population are soo shallow they will prefer to save 50p than buy British. Since 2007 I have been living in and out of the UK (Germany, Canada, Cyprus)...... I have to say I am proud to be British (even put my life on the line for it) but I know I will never live there by choice. When I visit friends and family I get itchy to leave again after a few weeks. Hopefully things are changing though and Britain will become a power again and not a soft weak country. I agree with benefit caps. Rant over, and put the soap box back away. Glyn |
||
26th Jan 2012 2:42pm |
|
MartinK Member Since: 02 Mar 2011 Location: Silverdale (Lancashire/Cumbria Border) Posts: 2665 |
Interesting thread this...
This week, I have been visiting a large organisation At the moment, their union are giving them stickers about "don't offshore our jobs". The car park is full of cheap imports (kia, hyundai, etc)...so it's OK to offshore car workers' jobs...but not their own??? Is this a case of "not in my backyard" or just double-standards? Jaguar / Land Rover have ~19,000 employees in UK - that's a lot to face the axe, and a lot for the working population to fund from tax I hope we support them...I do. MrsK has just bought an Evoque. Had it been a Kia, she would have been washing it herself Shallow, thoughtless, or just bent on self-destruction? Defender "Puma" 2.4 110 County Utility (possibly the last of the 2.4's) |
||
26th Jan 2012 3:24pm |
|
SteveT247 Member Since: 21 Feb 2011 Location: Central Posts: 491 |
On top of the actual car workers there is also the parts suppliers and the myriad of other industries that support/co depend and loss of jobs there. |
||
26th Jan 2012 3:51pm |
|
ZeDefender Member Since: 15 Sep 2011 Location: Munich Posts: 4731 |
Oh God - it's like reading from a mirror - frightening Tell someone you love them today because life is short. But shout it at them in German because life is also terrifying and confusing... |
||
26th Jan 2012 4:40pm |
|
JWL Member Since: 26 Oct 2011 Location: Hereford Posts: 3443 |
He said benifit caps not flat caps
|
||
26th Jan 2012 4:55pm |
|
22900013A Member Since: 23 Dec 2010 Location: Oxfordshire Posts: 3150 |
Their pay is probably so low they can't afford to buy a new car anyway, so they buy a cheap car which will be foreign. Many people have no choice but to buy what they can afford, and for many, thats not a lot. 2011 110 USW 1973 Series III 1-Ton 1972 Series III 1-Ton Cherrypicker 1969 IIA 1-Ton 1966 IIA 88" |
||
26th Jan 2012 5:26pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2025 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis