nickjaxe
Well-Known Member
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I see some owner refer to there series as a car...I hate it.
What do you think guys are they cars??
What do you think guys are they cars??
lol, our family call it the tractor or the 'flying oil leak'!I call mine a Landy....log book says Light 4x4 Utiliy - PLG.
I've heard them referred to as 'trucks' but that's rather US of A style.
I've also heard them referred to in terms unsuitable for a public forum....
Here's one for you, from an argument I had with my insurer.
If you've got comprehensive insurance on your Land Rover with driving other vehicles, ask if you can drive someone else's van on it. They'll probably say no because you have car insurance and drive a car, and even car derived vans are usually a no. But a Land Rover is not really a car, and it's not really a car derived van. So what is it? If it's not a car then it must be a van and you should be able to drive someone else's van, but you can't drive someone else's van because the van is not a car.
I can't remember the wording of the argument exactly, but the underlying reason was because I was insuring a car therefore driving another persons van was not allowed. If I was insuring a van then it would be fine. This doesn't make a lot of sense because of both what you've said and the inability of the person I was arguing with to give me the differences between a car and a car derived van. I was arguing that I'd driven vans since I passed my test (my first car was a van, not that this should make any difference to them anyway as this is just circumstantial), I was insured on another policy for driving a van that I owned, I was insured on another fleet insurance on both vans and lorries, and the fact that a Land Rover was nearer a van than a car. He was saying something about people not being able to drive a van as the views are limited etc, and I again argued that you can't really see a great deal out of a Land Rover anyway. Load of old tripe really and I'm still no nearer to knowing what my 110 would be classed as.Your policy no matter what the vehicle is even if its a lorry will normally only cover TPO for 'cars'
Load of old tripe really and I'm still no nearer to knowing what my 110 would be classed as.
mine is a fender!I see some owner refer to there series as a car...I hate it.
What do you think guys are they cars??
I can't remember the wording of the argument exactly, but the underlying reason was because I was insuring a car therefore driving another persons van was not allowed. If I was insuring a van then it would be fine. This doesn't make a lot of sense because of both what you've said and the inability of the person I was arguing with to give me the differences between a car and a car derived van. I was arguing that I'd driven vans since I passed my test (my first car was a van, not that this should make any difference to them anyway as this is just circumstantial), I was insured on another policy for driving a van that I owned, I was insured on another fleet insurance on both vans and lorries, and the fact that a Land Rover was nearer a van than a car. He was saying something about people not being able to drive a van as the views are limited etc, and I again argued that you can't really see a great deal out of a Land Rover anyway. Load of old tripe really and I'm still no nearer to knowing what my 110 would be classed as.
PLG? should say LGV?I call mine a Landy....log book says Light 4x4 Utiliy - PLG.
I've heard them referred to as 'trucks' but that's rather US of A style.
I've also heard them referred to in terms unsuitable for a public forum....
I see some owner refer to there series as a car...I hate it.
What do you think guys are they cars??
My insurence argument was "it says "truck"on the V5" as its ex-mil it sems they desribed it as "truck 3/4 ton" which came out as "truck". I had to get it changed and the only category on offer (from the DVLA) was "4x4 utility" whic is neither a truck, car nor van, hence my comment re "sui-generis" (legal for "a class of its own" used when something is not suffciently like any of the existing categoreis to be in one of those and so it is necessary to create a new one just for it. I think this is exaclty where Landrovers are, not least becuase we have unboltable bodies on replaceable chassis).
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