It depends on the car..

A mechanic I know quite well has a 2002 3.0 L322 it had a gearbox rebuild before his tenure and in the 3yrs he's had it, his total parts expense was £90 o_O:D

I'm assuming you own a FL2 going by your avatar so an L322 would be a nice progression..

If I were to recommend an L322 it would be the 2006+ L322 with the AJv8 the best L322 IMO..

Good engine and gearbox, the latter cars seem to have "some" of the niggles ironed out too which is nice..

£90, cant go wrong lol
 
how can you tell if its the jag v8?

yea got the FL2 atm


People forget new the car was 40/50/60k plus, and generally it will still have 40/50/60k car running costs.

As a mech myself I can confirm you can run them for not a fortune, but you need to buy one where the previoius owner has had a serious spend up.

I keep tabs on what I spend, and so far 5.5 yrs in we are at 5.5k, that is every spare part/tyres/oils and all repair bits discs/pads/susp parts mots etc, just not fuel/insurance and road tax.
Do not forget road tax is close to 600 per year/insurance 400 per year.

So roughly that has cost me 10k over 5.5 years, that is 40 quid per week every week, without even driving it.

Great cars, but you really really have to need/want one to financially justify it.
 
People forget new the car was 40/50/60k plus, and generally it will still have 40/50/60k car running costs.

As a mech myself I can confirm you can run them for not a fortune, but you need to buy one where the previoius owner has had a serious spend up.

I keep tabs on what I spend, and so far 5.5 yrs in we are at 5.5k, that is every spare part/tyres/oils and all repair bits discs/pads/susp parts mots etc, just not fuel/insurance and road tax.
Do not forget road tax is close to 600 per year/insurance 400 per year.

So roughly that has cost me 10k over 5.5 years, that is 40 quid per week every week, without even driving it.

Great cars, but you really really have to need/want one to financially justify it.

yea true say

i dont think thats too bad for a car with real off road capabilities and no worries about driving in the snow plus it weighs over two ton too
 
Get yerself one of the last freelander 2's built if yer want a newer vehicle. A pocket sized range rover without the daft running costs. Keep it for life and retire early on the savings of not buying a bigger rusty lr.
 
Get yerself one of the last freelander 2's built if yer want a newer vehicle. A pocket sized range rover without the daft running costs. Keep it for life and retire early on the savings of not buying a bigger rusty lr.
i hear ya but i fancy a change, change is good
 
i hear ya but i fancy a change, change is good

An empty wallet isn't good.

Don't forget you'd be going from one of the most reliable LR's with the lowest running costs, to one of the least reliable, with the highest running costs. £600 RFL :eek: that's 2 1/2 times that of the FL2, and it still won't be allowed in the new low emissions zones, so you'll need to buy a second car to cater for that need.

Why not get a Disco Sport? It'll be cheaper to run than the FFRR and be allowed to drive in the city. Ok its not an FFRR but it's got a 7 seat option and is pretty much a FL2 in a different body, and costs much less to run than the big LR's.;)
 
i hear ya but i fancy a change, change is good
May I suggest some D3/4 and rr training before you swap the FL2.

Burn a 20 sovs note each day of the week, as practice for the additional motoring costs you face if buying a D3/4 or rr.
 

Similar threads