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XplusYplusZ



Member Since: 16 Aug 2021
Location: UK
Posts: 489

Harry's Farm review


Just watched this, some interesting points from Harry:
Road driving is not great.
Diffs seem fiddly.
Did I understand correctly that the rear seats don't fold flat..!? He didn't take the headrests off and drop the seats with the bench up.. they must fold flat, right? Or this is a major inconvenience.
Post #994612 31st May 2023 10:44am
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DSC-off



Member Since: 16 Oct 2014
Location: North East
Posts: 1428

United Kingdom 2015 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 XS CSW Aintree Green
Discussed elsewhere.
No surprises.

Ferrari, Lamborghini, Jaguar, Lotus owner Harry doesn't like how it drives on the road.

Diffs fiddly? - Wow it has manually selectable locking diffs!!! (Optional)

The biggest issues with the Grenadier that are putting off traditional Defender owners are price, weight and fuel economy.
Post #994618 31st May 2023 11:06am
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BRUNEL1



Member Since: 22 Oct 2020
Location: North Somerset
Posts: 54

United Kingdom 2015 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 XS CSW Fuji White
He also has Range and Land Rovers. Sounds like steering feel/gearing and turning circle are also ‘issues’
Post #994634 31st May 2023 2:10pm
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Hairy Dan



Member Since: 25 Apr 2013
Location: NW Durham
Posts: 1418

United Kingdom 1998 Defender 90 V8 Petrol 50th Auto Chawton White
Re: Harry's Farm review
XplusYplusZ wrote:

Did I understand correctly that the rear seats don't fold flat..!? He didn't take the headrests off and drop the seats with the bench up.. they must fold flat, right? Or this is a major inconvenience.


Yep the rear seats don't fold flat, according to this video there is an 18cm step up

https://youtu.be/JsFdpolWPrM?t=342 Cheers Ian
--------------------
22MY Defender 110 D200 SE, Fuji White.
Kielder 4x4 Safari
Instagram @defender_v8
Post #994639 31st May 2023 3:01pm
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Defendit..



Member Since: 09 Aug 2020
Location: 's-Hertogenbosch
Posts: 431

Netherlands 
Steering, to many turns and not self centering.
You're not gonna getting used to it. No Mud flaps for my 90.!
-----------------------------------------
P300s MY21 Keswick Green on air, adv.+ offroad pack, DRL+fog, Dinamica Suedecloth + Ebony headliner/Cross Beam- Many Mods..
Post #994704 1st Jun 2023 7:06am
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LandymanStefan



Member Since: 30 Aug 2017
Location: Surrey
Posts: 881

England 2001 Defender 90 Td5 SW Epsom Green
While i agree with his points about the lock to lock steering and unladen weight, i think hes been extremely harsh on it for a brand new vehicle. Im not sure if his associations with LR have anything to do with it but i dont think ive ever seen him be so negative about any vehicle. I know he was never a fan of the original defender so maybe this is just continuing the theme. For starters he quotes the prices wrong and in the harrys garage video says there's only the trailmaster and fielmaster variants for £70k when you can actually buy the basic stationwagon for £58k.

I also think pitching it against the new LR defender is the wrong car to put it up against, the defender has become a lifestyle luxury suv, I dont think we'll ever see many of them being offroaded and overlanded, its not the sort of platform that lends itself to modification, adaptation, easy repairs and to be built for your individual needs. I would be putting it up against a wrangler (£60k start price) Or a good used g wagon (Around £50k) or outside of europe the 70 series cruisers.

Part of me thinks he doesnt actually understand who this is aimed at or has very limited knowledge into the offroad/overland community. To say manually switchable locking diffs is a flaw is almost laughable. Sure if youre clueless having a computer react to an issue and lock your diff is ok however anyone knowledgeable would prefer to pre empt the obstacle and lock up prior to hitting it, also taking the computer out of the equation is a bonus in my eyes.

I think the only comparable brand new vehicle on the market in europe at the moment is the wrangler, in terms of build, design and purpose. Although the wrangler isnt intended for commercial use like the grenadier. I can only see benefits of having the grenadier on the market as competition. I will have to take one for a test drive at some point to see what all the fuss is about with the foot rest.
Post #994795 1st Jun 2023 9:33pm
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County V8



Member Since: 07 Jun 2021
Location: UK
Posts: 147

United Kingdom 
He didn't disclose that he is a consultant for JLR so make of that what you will he even had it on his linked in page.
Post #994871 2nd Jun 2023 3:51pm
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RDR



Member Since: 27 Apr 2018
Location: Derbyshire
Posts: 592

United Kingdom 
He didn’t like the l460 phev he basically said the l405 phev was better and LR should have done better. He then publicly voiced his frustration further and cancelled his order. Not sure he has much of a relationship left with LR after that review.

I like how he tried to split the review with different lenses on Harry’s farm vs Harry’s garage. I want to go and view a grenadier and was hoping I would like it but the footwell arrangements blown it for me. 110 MY23.5 X Dynamic HSE
RR MY23 HSE PHEV
D5 MY19 HSE - Now Sold
D4 MY16 HSE Luxury - Now Sold
D4 MY12 HSE - Gone
D3 MY06 S - Gone but not forgotten
Post #994886 2nd Jun 2023 5:24pm
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Retroanaconda



Member Since: 04 Jan 2012
Location: Scotland
Posts: 2656

Scotland 
He no longer works for LR, the LinkedIn page is years out of date apparently.
Post #994889 2nd Jun 2023 6:17pm
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dailysleaze



Member Since: 23 May 2013
Location: United Kingdom
Posts: 237

United Kingdom 
Here's his specific comment on the matter


Click image to enlarge
Post #994897 2nd Jun 2023 7:14pm
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County V8



Member Since: 07 Jun 2021
Location: UK
Posts: 147

United Kingdom 
That hit a nerve
Post #994905 2nd Jun 2023 7:52pm
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RobKeay



Member Since: 19 Jul 2009
Location: Stafford
Posts: 1582

United Kingdom 2014 Defender 110 Puma 2.2 USW Corris Grey
Harry gives his honest opinion in my view. One of an extremely successful chap, so his requirements tend to be different to mine.

I brought old style defenders for work, use them and have lads use them. At 50k upwards sod that. We have vans now and would likely buy a ford ranger at a much more affordable price. The old defenders were 25k (I know that was nearly ten years ago) but a good van is 30k odd.

If I was spending 50k plus it would be a new defender and it wouldn’t be used for work and lads wrecking it.

Not sure why people get so upset about a man’s opinion from a platform that’s free 😗
Post #995008 3rd Jun 2023 10:07pm
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lightning



Member Since: 23 Apr 2009
Location: High Peak, Derbyshire
Posts: 2840

United Kingdom 
There's been a lot of discussion about the Harry's Farm review on another forum.

lt's true the Grenadier isn't for everyone, including Harry by the looks of it. l didn't see his review as particularly bad, just that the vehicle wasn't for him.

As to what vehicle to compare it to, that's another discussion! Most compare it to the new Defender but l agree the Wrangler is more of a direct competitor. But when l mentioned this on the USA forum there was much disagreement.

The general consensus was, the new Defender is for people who want to buy into the image of adventure but not the compromises that kind of vehicle brings.

The Grenadier is for those who are more likely to actually use the vehicle for what it's designed to do, but they still want something that can be used daily.

One advantage of the Defender is that in Commercial specification it qualifies for VAT reclamation through a business.

Land Rover have managed to get Commercial classification with regards to tax, BIK and VAT where the Grenadier only qualifies with DVLA

This makes quite a difference if like me you want to use it for your business.

My D250 Commercial with a few options cost £55,000
I am not VAT registered but just claiming the tax back has saved me around £14,000
Plus the running costs and fuel can go through the business.
Post #995107 5th Jun 2023 8:19am
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Chris86



Member Since: 15 Jul 2014
Location: South Yorks
Posts: 789

United Kingdom 2005 Defender 110 Td5 USW Chawton White
Review
Having now watched Harrys videos a few things strike me;

Actually I thought it quite a good balanced review- without falling into the 'Its the real defender Successor' trap.

He has highlighted some good and some not so good things with the car- if I were in a position to buy one this is exactly the type of review I would want to see hear (I'm not.....and probably if I had that sort of money kicking abut it would be allocated elsewhere).

He makes a valid point regarding whether its fit for todays market- its not going to be able to survive on enthusiasts alone, there needs to be a viable work case too- which means it has to compete with all the modern pickups alongside Defender Commercial, D5 commercial and Landcruiser commercial all of which I would describe as niche products.

Interesting that the diff lock functions were picked up- the W463A manages to be very capable on its 4-ETS system alone, and you can manually control the diff locks- which then removes the TC functions- I had assumed the Grenadier would be a similar set up- has anyone actually had first hand experiece of how the driver and traction aid functions are mapped to each other?

Chris
Post #995348 6th Jun 2023 4:57pm
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Reubs1215



Member Since: 09 Aug 2022
Location: Inverness
Posts: 15

United Kingdom 
LandymanStefan wrote:
While i agree with his points about the lock to lock steering and unladen weight, i think hes been extremely harsh on it for a brand new vehicle. Im not sure if his associations with LR have anything to do with it but i dont think ive ever seen him be so negative about any vehicle. I know he was never a fan of the original defender so maybe this is just continuing the theme. For starters he quotes the prices wrong and in the harrys garage video says there's only the trailmaster and fielmaster variants for £70k when you can actually buy the basic stationwagon for £58k.

I also think pitching it against the new LR defender is the wrong car to put it up against, the defender has become a lifestyle luxury suv, I dont think we'll ever see many of them being offroaded and overlanded, its not the sort of platform that lends itself to modification, adaptation, easy repairs and to be built for your individual needs. I would be putting it up against a wrangler (£60k start price) Or a good used g wagon (Around £50k) or outside of europe the 70 series cruisers.

Part of me thinks he doesnt actually understand who this is aimed at or has very limited knowledge into the offroad/overland community. To say manually switchable locking diffs is a flaw is almost laughable. Sure if youre clueless having a computer react to an issue and lock your diff is ok however anyone knowledgeable would prefer to pre empt the obstacle and lock up prior to hitting it, also taking the computer out of the equation is a bonus in my eyes.

I think the only comparable brand new vehicle on the market in europe at the moment is the wrangler, in terms of build, design and purpose. Although the wrangler isnt intended for commercial use like the grenadier. I can only see benefits of having the grenadier on the market as competition. I will have to take one for a test drive at some point to see what all the fuss is about with the foot rest.


Firstly, I agree that I don't think I've ever seen HM so harsh on a new production vehicle, other than his thoughts on the old def and probably the plug-in rr sport he had as a long termer a few years ago. But I think a lot of the criticism is valid.

Re price discrepancy; I think they're the only ones you can get a hold of atm, certainly every car I've seen in the UK's been either the Trail or Fieldmaster (I ran into the Highland Launch vehicles up north and I go past a dealership down south regularly). Quite rightly to, they're a newer manufacturer with years off DevEx to recuperate. Why fill precious early build slots with base spec trucks for ROW markets when for not a lot more £/unit you can sell a truck for £15-50k more and only ship it from France to UK. Also, Ford famously used to double the profitability of the Escort buy simply selling the upgraded stereo system, margins are tight on most new cars... This' become even more obvious over the last few years with the introduction of 'first editions' (New Def even had one) these are model runs specifically created to maximise the profitably of the early units & have a secondary bonus of stress testing the new production lines, e.g. can we fit accessory bars and heated seats to a unit going down the line as fast as one optioned without these?

Bringing it back, so while there's technically Station Wagon listed, go find one on a dealer lot? BMW still had base spec 3 & 5 series on steelies and wheel trims til not that long ago theoretically, but alloys was a 'mandatory option' ticked for you in the UK since the e30. Therefore, I think old Harry going it starts at 68K's fair, same as he pointed out that they've already upped the price / changed the model range of the defender.

Secondly, I think pitching it against the new defender is justified; same 'price', same ability, and generally marketed at the same groups of buyers. Re 'will we see them in the wilderness', you'd be genuinely amazed how many new defenders I see doing old fashion 'land rover work'. On AT tyres, dragging multi-axle ifor williams trailers up and down the UK, now they're just more comfortable, more economical and don't so crawl up long steep roads Laughing Is it the majority of them, no, but certainly more than I thought I would see. I think we'll only see more as well when 'buyers remorse' wears down between the owners. E.g. didn't see many top spec D2 being off roaded until they were several owners deep and only a couple of grand, the owner now no longer cares about a few scratches and starts to appreciate the vehicles for their ability rather than the unavoidable price tag atm.

Also, the Ineos has enough complicated electronics to leave you as stranded as a new defender, a wrangler, bronco, LC Amazon or the v8 70 series all have computers these days (very few markets even allow the selling of the 'UN-spec', non-turbo , non-ecu 70 series). But even with LR's questionable reliability around electronics, LR, Jeep, Ford and Toyota are long established OEMs so would probably trust their ability to build a reliable car over a brand new manufacturer with hardware coming together in an entirely novel package. I wasn't on the BMW team who designed the B57 but I don't imagine the shock loading from a fully locked up pair of solid live axles featured highly in their use cases, and other than EMEA buyers I'm not entirely sure who the B58 engine's aimed at.

Despite this full-bore reply though I'm still keen to have a good poke round one etc. Also, don't get me wrong I love the charm of my old defender but it is objectively toss at most things required from a car. Neither do I try claim to be a world renowned explorer, so if I was to immediately set off across some inhospitable waste land I think I'd take steyr puch 300gd 'barn-door' Troopy, on high profile, skinny tyres. Mostly because that was the last time someone tried copying and beating Land Rover / Toyota at their own game and they spent 30 years refining it, they're a lot more than the competition but the build quality is awe-inspiring.

PS soz Stefan, I'm bored sat on a train lol 2001 Defender 90 Td5 County Station Wagon

Instagram: @jme252
Post #995460 7th Jun 2023 3:35pm
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