xconspirisist
New Member
Hi folks. So I thought I'd post a thread to introduce myself and my first Land Rover purchase - a 1999 Discovery 2.
Excitedly, I bought it in a hury, I drove it away from the guy I bought it from, and did about 200 miles in it. Then it broke down! I'm no mechanic (infact, I barely know where the oil goes), and I bought a dud and got a bit screwed, I'm just posting so I can get it out of my system. I'm quite happy to pay for it to be professionally fixed and I know that I could not have done this work myself, so not looking for advice there. It was a private sale too, and it was 2 months ago now, I'm not looking to get my money back via trading standards or anything.
The symptoms that I experienced were, after driving it for about 2 hours at 70mph down a motorway, was that it suddenly lost almost all power. The engine temperature indicator on the dashboard shot right up to the lower red section and for a moment the red temperature light came on too. I found a place to pull over and parked it up.
I've got AA membership, so I called them. Bummer, thought I.
By the time the AA van turned up, there was time enough for the engine to cool down. I popped the cap on the water tank and it was empty. ****. The AA guy filled it from dry - it took many, many litres. Now what he pointed out was that I hadn't spotted was a bit of dirty golden deposit around the cap of the water tank. Apparently that means the previous owner knew the head gasket has probably gone, and filled it with k-seal. Bummer.
I limped it home - stopping every 30 miles and filling it up with water. I got it booked into a local garage and waited for the worst. Well, they found the following;
So, it's an expensive start! It's a bit of a kick in the teeth, but a I absolutely knew I was buying a car that would require some work. I just underestimated how much work would be needed immediately! I don't mean to be vulgar, but I'm lucky to have the money to fill in for my lack of research[/intelligence], and these are jobs I didn't want to attempt myself
The car to me is going to be an "adventure fun car", less of a project to learn how to become a full time mechanic (I have a job, thank you very much!). But with that being said I will certainly go buy some basic tools if there is a job I think I could do myself Until it's fixed up, I'll be driving my more reliable 2011 VW Polo!
Excitedly, I bought it in a hury, I drove it away from the guy I bought it from, and did about 200 miles in it. Then it broke down! I'm no mechanic (infact, I barely know where the oil goes), and I bought a dud and got a bit screwed, I'm just posting so I can get it out of my system. I'm quite happy to pay for it to be professionally fixed and I know that I could not have done this work myself, so not looking for advice there. It was a private sale too, and it was 2 months ago now, I'm not looking to get my money back via trading standards or anything.
The symptoms that I experienced were, after driving it for about 2 hours at 70mph down a motorway, was that it suddenly lost almost all power. The engine temperature indicator on the dashboard shot right up to the lower red section and for a moment the red temperature light came on too. I found a place to pull over and parked it up.
I've got AA membership, so I called them. Bummer, thought I.
By the time the AA van turned up, there was time enough for the engine to cool down. I popped the cap on the water tank and it was empty. ****. The AA guy filled it from dry - it took many, many litres. Now what he pointed out was that I hadn't spotted was a bit of dirty golden deposit around the cap of the water tank. Apparently that means the previous owner knew the head gasket has probably gone, and filled it with k-seal. Bummer.
I limped it home - stopping every 30 miles and filling it up with water. I got it booked into a local garage and waited for the worst. Well, they found the following;
- Yup, the head gasket has gone. The cause was a crack in the "coolant return pipe".
- The rear crossmember has delaminated and corroded so badly that it needs replacing too.
- The fuel cooler assembly is missing, and had been totally bypassed. I need to research what that means.They're going to source a replacement and get it fitted.
So, it's an expensive start! It's a bit of a kick in the teeth, but a I absolutely knew I was buying a car that would require some work. I just underestimated how much work would be needed immediately! I don't mean to be vulgar, but I'm lucky to have the money to fill in for my lack of research[/intelligence], and these are jobs I didn't want to attempt myself
The car to me is going to be an "adventure fun car", less of a project to learn how to become a full time mechanic (I have a job, thank you very much!). But with that being said I will certainly go buy some basic tools if there is a job I think I could do myself Until it's fixed up, I'll be driving my more reliable 2011 VW Polo!
Last edited: