jai_landrover
Well-Known Member
Erm...................
I did tho!!
not in body width though
Series 1's are.but it is narrower
Would seem odd if more than one Defender bent their steering while no Series did??IMO they both have their own pro and cons.
I did a 6500 mile trip in 2009 with 14 days of that, completely off road (Canol Expedition Yukon-NWT) in a bone stock Series 3 109. Comparing it to a Defender the obvious stands out...leafs vs. coils so more comfortable in the Defender, however all the Defenders on our trip bent steering arms, and damaged the plastic wheel arches, whereas the Series trucks suffered no damage to steering arms. Sometimes a simple practical design has advantages.
Good quality parabolics would be fine. Cheapy wrong spring rate ones wouldn't.Now saying all of the above after the trip I bought a Defender 110...I just couldn't take the beating that Leaf Springs impose on the driver and passengers anymore. Parabolics I've been told help both with ride and articulation, but in some cases can't take the beating that the original leaf springs can.
I don't disagree, but it does happen sometimes. At some CCVT style trials events I've seen even a 2.5TD 90 fail to make a couple of climbs due to lack of grunt.As far as engines...all the series and defender engines can do the job off road if well maintained and prepared properly.
Don't they look quite similar? And not hugely different mechanically either.I think it really comes down to preference...there is that classic look of a series truck, they are simple to work on and can take almost anything thrown at them...but a Defender has the better suspension, and usually a more powerful engine.