Home > Off Topic > Anyone running or had an Outlander phev? |
|
|
Balvaig Member Since: 19 Feb 2016 Location: Fife Posts: 730 |
I have one, now well into second year of ownership from new.
Only problem experienced was the front number plate falling off in second month Get just over 28 miles on electric in summer, less in winter as battery not as efficient but still over 20 miles. Drives well, and quite speedy for it’s size if you want. Takes 5 hours to recharge on a normal 13 amp socket. No leaks, rattles, rust or software problems. Pretty boring compared to Defender App allows you to preheat or cool the cabin before you set off, or set charging time if you are on cheap tariff overnight. |
||
8th Jun 2021 7:06pm |
|
lohr500 Member Since: 14 Sep 2014 Location: Skipton Posts: 1316 |
Thanks for the info Balvaig.
I have ordered one online. Due for delivery in early July. We have Economy 7 so I will use the timer facility to charge the battery overnight. I don't think I am going to bother with a higher output wall charger. If it charges in 5 hours or so from a 13 amp socket, that will be fine for me. I'm going to take the option of the three year service plan as well because I think this will be more cost effective than paying for three separate services over the years. |
||
9th Jun 2021 5:59am |
|
Balvaig Member Since: 19 Feb 2016 Location: Fife Posts: 730 |
Like you most of my journeys are local. The 13 amp domestic charger came with the car. Couldn't justify the cost of the wall charger and extra charger cable for faster charging, given that a full charge is 5 hours. I just use the petrol engine for the few longer journeys.
You need to drive the car differently to get the best out of electric drive. Braking is surreal as electric regeneration cuts in first, and you can almost stop without using the brakes. Hope you enjoy the car. I have no regrets. Mitsubishi seem to have sorted the early problems out over the 5 years of production, which is why I went for the slightly older technology. |
||
9th Jun 2021 6:23am |
|
lohr500 Member Since: 14 Sep 2014 Location: Skipton Posts: 1316 |
Looking forward to it.
My thinking is the same as yours. They have had plenty of time to iron out any early problems, which is more than can be said for the Jeep Wrangler I am trading in. But that's another story |
||
9th Jun 2021 6:27am |
|
Badger110 Member Since: 06 Feb 2018 Location: South hams Posts: 1039 |
I have a pre phev outlander which is the same age and mileage as the defender and is worlds apart in build and reliability.
If the Phev’s are built the same, then it’ll be a good truck |
||
9th Jun 2021 7:42am |
|
pjm-84 Member Since: 12 Apr 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 661 |
Had one for 6years. Great car but a tad boring. Boot a little small for the two dogs. Servicing becomes expensive after year 3. Year 5 onwards requires an annual value check @£££. Paid £932 last year for the service, MOT and new boots on the front structs
Toyed with replacing the PHEV with a Defender PHEV but went with the P400 instead. Two things went wrong. Boot lock and sticking front caliper. Sorted under warranty, including new discs and pads on the front. 33500 miles in 6years and around 10.5mwh of electricity |
||
9th Jun 2021 8:02am |
|
J77 Member Since: 04 Nov 2019 Location: Fife Posts: 3394 |
My old man was given a commercial version by his work, they found it useless for their needs. Nice to drive but range in the winter was pretty poor, in the summer wasn’t that much better and the petrol engine gutsy. But if it suits your lifestyle then it’s a good buy. 24MY 90 D250 HSE, Tasman Blue
|
||
9th Jun 2021 9:55am |
|
lohr500 Member Since: 14 Sep 2014 Location: Skipton Posts: 1316 |
@pjm-84. Agree, it is a bit boring. But for the price, I can live with it.
What is the annual value check all about after 5 years? The three year service plan is £575, so that should cover all my servicing costs up to November 2023. A Defender phev is unfortunately outside of my budget. @J77, I can imagine it wouldn't be practical as a works vehicle as the electric only range is fairly restrictive. But for the local journeys I do, it will hopefully be able to run on electric most of the time. And no worries over range anxiety with the petrol engine as well. I'm doing less than 5000 miles a year now I am retired, with very few long distance runs. @Badger, I'm hoping reliability will be good. They have been selling them for a number of years so they should have sorted out any gremlins. And if they are built anything like the old Shoguns, they should be pretty robust. We've run MOT failure Shoguns at our sailing club for towing dinghies around and they are pretty bombproof other than the rear callipers which seize up from repeated dunking in the reservoir and never going on a good run to work them hard. |
||
9th Jun 2021 10:23am |
|
pjm-84 Member Since: 12 Apr 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 661 |
18 to 27miles on electric. 37 to 45mpg on a flat battery. Actually managed a 25mile trip at 54mpg on a flat battery (50mph motorway limit). Mine was a MY2016 so pre button option (i.e the ICE would cut in when demanding heat to clear the screen)
3yrs service plan = bargain. No hydraulic valves so annual valve check at year 5 onwards. Year 8 - Big service @ £1400. CVT takes a little getting use to. |
||
9th Jun 2021 11:52am |
|
lohr500 Member Since: 14 Sep 2014 Location: Skipton Posts: 1316 |
Shame it doesn't have hydraulic tappets though. If I still have the car, I might need to dust down my feeler gauges once the warranty runs out. Probably a bit more complicated than checking the clearances on the old 2 1/4 Landie engine! |
||
9th Jun 2021 11:59am |
|
pjm-84 Member Since: 12 Apr 2021 Location: Hampshire Posts: 661 |
Actually scrub all that because they changed the petrol engine a few years back ..... this relates to the old 2.0l
|
||
9th Jun 2021 12:20pm |
|
lohr500 Member Since: 14 Sep 2014 Location: Skipton Posts: 1316 |
Did some googling and even the new 4B12 2.4 engine needs a valve clearance check at 6 & 12 years, or 90k / 180k km according to one service schedule I found. Not sure if the UK schedule will have the same requirements. Workshop manual would suggest that checking the clearance isn't too complicated. Only a pain if the tappets need changing for different thicknesses, at which point the cams have to be removed. Still, no cambelt to worry about
|
||
9th Jun 2021 12:39pm |
|
|
All times are GMT |
< Previous Topic | Next Topic > |
Posting Rules
|
Site Copyright © 2006-2024 Futuranet Ltd & Martin Lewis