4.6 lpg city driving mainly. 42gbp for 100miles in france. Expensive but at least the v8 makes me smile every second. V8 or nothing a diesel rangie isn't the real thing.
V8 or nothing A diesel Rangie isn't the real thing.
4.0 HSE auto on LPG. 20mpg at 80p/litre = about £14.50 per 100 miles, plus a few pennies for petrol from cold start.
I may buy a P38 oil burner in few months to do long trips in Europe/North Africa.Haha - I already own a V8 Classic, so I know what you mean!
It's weird - the diesel owners are adament there's are the bets option, the V8 + LPG owners are voting for theirs - which is to be expected! However, those who have owned both seem to be leaning towards the V8...hmm....!
Haha - I already own a V8 Classic, so I know what you mean!
It's weird - the diesel owners are adament there's are the bets option, the V8 + LPG owners are voting for theirs - which is to be expected! However, those who have owned both seem to be leaning towards the V8...hmm....!
Haha - I already own a V8 Classic, so I know what you mean!
It's weird - the diesel owners are adament there's are the bets option, the V8 + LPG owners are voting for theirs - which is to be expected! However, those who have owned both seem to be leaning towards the V8...hmm....!
Topped mine of and did some mixed driving, was £24 to top off again after 100 miles. Mine is a 2.5 TD Auto, as for being dangerously slow it sounds like a petrol head being biased again, maybe it feels slow to a V8 but compared to the Pajero I had before its a rocket ship and mine is not chipped. Tows our 23 foot boat on a twin axle trailer with ease, towed it up the A9 last year and not once was I holding up traffic oh and she just turned 150K.
Davie
It's all about balance really.
Hands up did anyone on here really buy a Range Rover for it's economy?
I've had and am lucky enough to still own some big cars, but if I had to make a long trip my Rangie would would be my first choice.
It's just a nice place to be which ever engine it's got or what ever it runs on!
It's all about balance really.
Hands up did anyone on here really buy a Range Rover for it's economy?
-)
Brain fade I normally work on litres per 100 kilometres Long term average is 24mpg, paying about £5 per gallon so as you say about £21. I can dream of the days as a lad when £1 bought me 5 gallons rather than £5 buying 1 gallon
I bought mine for economy, the Galloper 100hp diesel did 12mpg with the caravan on the back and was down to second gear on slight motorway inclines. Round and about it did 18 to 19 compared to 24mpg for the P38.
The P38 is also rapid compared to the Galloper which was flat out at 120Kmh, the P38 cruises happily at 130Kph with some in hand and at 110Kph on the autoroute will turn in 30mpg. The other economy was the purchase price compared to a Pajero/Land Cruiser, oh and P38 parts are cheaper too although it does need more attention than a Jap
I did look at other 4x4's I had a Pajero 3.5 24 valve SWB before I bought my P38 so I know all about poor mpg
I didn't like the newer Jap stuff and even looked at a couple of Jeep's which I thought fely cheap and nasty...
I didn't really consider a Range Rover (to be honest I didn't know what all the fuss was about) but then I had a go in a few and I could start to understand the attaction...
Petrol 4.6 approx £45 per 100 miles. My new Classic 4.2 is better approx £44 per 100 miles.
I think the derv drivers have been driving their motors too long and have forgotten what a proper car should drive like. They are painfully slow and unrefined.Considering they were stll leaving the factory as late as 2001 and costing over £35K the performance of a Diesel P38 is nothing short of scandalous. LR didn't have a decent Diesel until the TDV6 (and thats no ball of fire). Even the TD6 in the L322 is asthmatic.
Running costs in a V8 are horrendous, but get an LPG'd one and you get the best of both worlds V8 power and derv running costs.op2: