1998 2.5 range rover with 160K worth a risk ?
1998 2.5 range rover with 160K worth a risk ?
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Discussion

bluebear

Original Poster:

604 posts

176 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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HI all. just seen a range rover 2.5 diesel with 160k on the clock. full s/h and a spring conversion ? its up for 2k Ono. looks the part and full of all the goodies you would want. diesel engine so not too bad on the wallet. believe these were BMW units. what you all think. only looking to get 2 years of a barge out of it. smile

Rocksteadyeddie

7,971 posts

249 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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Good luck my friend. RIP your wallet.

Truckosaurus

12,873 posts

306 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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As with any complex banger I think you can run one successfully (cheaply) if you have access to other vehicles (or can walk to work smile) as this will allow you time to fix any problems by sourcing used parts or discounted mail order bits (maybe even doing your own labour on evenings and weekends) instead of being forced to pay through the nose for new and shiny kit to get back on the road asap.

10 Pence Short

32,880 posts

239 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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A friend of mine who spanners all sorts of Land Rovers and Range Rovers got rid of his and won't touch another of that vintage. Too many complex electronic systems that like nothing more than to randomly break down and leave you with an unusable PoS. Parts and expertise generally at the FE end unless you're lucky and on first name terms with someone intimate with the electronic parts.

KrazyIvan

4,341 posts

197 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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I had a P38 with the 4.6 V8, was great when it woked, shame it never worked, I had a repalced the engine, the suspension and most of the electronics.....it it would still break down for no reason what so ever.

WeirdNeville

6,034 posts

237 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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My dad had one with an Isuzu engine conversion. I'd never seen him cry until he owned that car. Everything broke. Everything. Gearboxes, clutches, diffs, electrics, suspension, incredibly expensive ECU's....

And the 2.5 diesel is both thirsty and slow.

markswebpages

174 posts

199 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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A mate of mine bought P38 cheap!

I lost count of the amount of evenings I spent helping him trying to get it up together. Even with the right tools most Jobs where a complete nightmare! Every time we fixed a fault something else would break or start leaking. Let alone the random immobilizer fault that would disable the vehicle randomly at it's own will (having borrowed a device to sync it he eventually just bought it)!

He sold it 6 months later at a huge loss and neither him nor I would touch one again LOL

theironduke

6,995 posts

210 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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Ive flirted with the idea of a P38 as a cheapo winter barge while the TVR is tucked up.... Concluded i would probably go for a Jag XJR....seems the cheaper option..

SuperHangOn

3,486 posts

175 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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Doubt you would see MPG out of the 20's. Heads crack, electrics are a nightmare. Unless you need a 4x4 you might as well get a petrol powered barge.

infradig

978 posts

229 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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We've all thought about cheap P38's and I'm sure thinking a coiled manual diesel is the simplest has crossed many an outwardly sane mans mind-it certainly has mine.

Here's a simple cure,go to your nearest Land Rover independent specialist. Look out the back,now count how many immaculate P38's there are collapsed in the weeds. Most probably only went there for a warning light to be checked out! I guarantee this will be the case all over the country(I even know a place in Brittany that has half a dozen)

The second part of this exercise involves looking at what a nice RR Classic or Disco £2000 buys.

jonah35

3,940 posts

179 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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if you are looking at a 2k car i'm guessing your pockets aren't massively deep

£500 will get sunk like we'd nibble a biscuit before dinner

they are 2k for a reason and it could end up costing you 10k and give you lots of tears

if, however, you earn good money but just want a cheap snotter as you don't like having expensive cars because of various reasons and can just afford to 'bin it' when it goes bang then try it. you may get 2 days out of it, you may get a year out of it.

however, for 2k there are better cars!

edo

16,699 posts

287 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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I own a P38 RR, but it is 2001.

I wouldn't buy a £2k RR. You WILL spend the same again on it in the next 12 months, MINIMUM.


Rocksteadyeddie

7,971 posts

249 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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OP, if nothing else at least the advice is consistent. wink

edo

16,699 posts

287 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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I would add that whilst I have bought an immaculate (V8) version which has a fantastic history, never been scrimped on work, and only 48,000 miles on it, It just cost me a few quid to have a few minor niggles sorted, and an issue with the rear brakes. If you don't want to spend money keeping on top of it, spend your £2k elsewhere.

Jw Vw

4,904 posts

185 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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Rocksteadyeddie said:
OP, if nothing else at least the advice is consistent. wink
Agreed. Money pit waiting to happen!

ShayneJ

1,073 posts

201 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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I'm a landrover fanboy and I wouldn't touch one with a 10 foot pole

is all you need to know ( DONT just DONT )

anonymous-user

76 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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I remember once someone described them as a 'job list on wheels' laugh

edo

16,699 posts

287 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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ShayneJ said:
I'm a landrover fanboy and I wouldn't touch one with a 10 foot pole

is all you need to know ( DONT just DONT )
There are "good" ones out there, but not at £2k

johnpeat

5,329 posts

287 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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Mechanic I know told someone NOT to buy one of these and he bought it anyway.

He then brought it in with an endless list of faults - good earner for the mechanic but the owner got shirtier and shirtier about the size of the bills until the suspension failed and the size of the estimate resulted in a massive argument and some flying spanners...

Next I see of it and it's jacked-up outside his house - he was attempting a DIY spring conversion (working under an RR held-up by 2 trolley jacks!!). Took him over 6 weeks and he got another 2 weeks of use before the engine died.

It cost just under £3K - ate twice that in cash in a year and was sold as a non-runner for £800 - I'd steer WELL clear...

skyline501

215 posts

208 months

Saturday 20th August 2011
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