Land Rover Discovery TD5. 2003. Mad to buy?
Land Rover Discovery TD5. 2003. Mad to buy?
Author
Discussion

largespiced

Original Poster:

185 posts

158 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
My boss is selling his Land Rover Discovery TD5, 2003. He purchased it around 3 years ago and has spent around 5k in repairs in that time. Its finally working with no lights on the dash or any other faults. He has decided to sell it on while its in its current working state, scared what the next bill might be.

I want it! Always liked it ever since he first got it. Would it be a mad thing to buy or take the risk considering the money already spent on it? It currently starts, stops and drives with no problem! 120k on the clock and a good price.

Thoughts?

sandman77

3,063 posts

159 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
The reason he's selling it is the exact reason you shouldn't buy it.

anonymous-user

75 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Get chassis checked as they rot from the back. If this is sound, I’d say buy it and enjoy all your boss’s hard work and expense.

largespiced

Original Poster:

185 posts

158 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
He is having a new MOT put on it this week. Looking at the MOT history it has never had mention of Chassis rot (any rust/rot issues infact)

Willy Nilly

12,511 posts

188 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
It would surely depend on how much he wants for it. It's 15 years old now and most cars of that age are going to require plenty of maintenance to keep running.

senwar

37 posts

170 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
largespiced said:
My boss is selling his Land Rover Discovery TD5, 2003. He purchased it around 3 years ago and has spent around 5k in repairs in that time. Its finally working with no lights on the dash or any other faults. He has decided to sell it on while its in its current working state, scared what the next bill might be.

I want it! Always liked it ever since he first got it. Would it be a mad thing to buy or take the risk considering the money already spent on it? It currently starts, stops and drives with no problem! 120k on the clock and a good price.

Thoughts?
The final sentence in your first paragraph should give you the answer you need!

If it doesn't - IMO, then yes, mad to buy

largespiced

Original Poster:

185 posts

158 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Tough one. It would be perfect for family duties. We used to have a 300TDI disco and it was faultless but the TD5 era is known for its problems, but a 5k spend since he had it should have fixed many of the issues you would hope!

We are going to borrow it for a few days and see how we get on. Working they are amazing things and he has been all over Europe in it, but he has also been recovered a fair few times home for various problems.

TiminYorkshire

581 posts

240 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Is it an auto or manual?

TiminYorkshire

581 posts

240 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
And does it have ACE fitted?

largespiced

Original Poster:

185 posts

158 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Its Auto. Good or bad? Ace fitted and working. He had this repaired.

ALawson

8,005 posts

272 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Ask yourself what your relationship with the boss will be when if blows up 5 mins after paying him the money.

I have learnt to never buy/sell cars from friends or relatives, unless you are happy to deal with the worst outcome with no redress.

Is that £5k indy or AD repairs? I expect there is a big difference in what work would be undertaken by the later.

LandRoverManiac

402 posts

113 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
Mad? No. Cautious? Yes.

With these you either get a good one or a bad one - my one is currently ambivalent as to which camp it falls into! A good one will be all the vehicle you could ever need for load lugging, people-moving, trailering, etc. A bad one will drive you up the wall and make you swear never to buy a Landy ever again.

It would be worth having a flick through the receipts of the 5K repair bills it has accrued. If for example that 5K includes a recent clutch/DMF change - then that's a 1K+ bill you won't have to worry about for the next couple of years. If it includes head gasket being done - then that's another couple of hundred you won't have to shell out and if fixed properly solves one of the major weaknesses of the TD5. Same goes for the front propshaft being rebuilt (carden joints go bad), air suspension, steering knuckle joints, injector seals or ACE pipework. These are common issues with the D2 and once fixed/attended to - it's rare that those things need redoing again in the next couple of years.

On the other hand, if the bills tend to repeat themselves (indicating recurring faults that are not solved) and/or be all sorts of things which don't fall under the 'they all do that at some point' category - then move on. There are plenty of Disco 2s around to choose from and you can be picky.

Toed64

299 posts

141 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
I think it's all be said above...

However, what do you call a good price? If it's £2000 then fine, if it's £6000, I'd buy a Toyota!

largespiced

Original Poster:

185 posts

158 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
LandRoverManiac said:
Mad? No. Cautious? Yes.

With these you either get a good one or a bad one - my one is currently ambivalent as to which camp it falls into! A good one will be all the vehicle you could ever need for load lugging, people-moving, trailering, etc. A bad one will drive you up the wall and make you swear never to buy a Landy ever again.

It would be worth having a flick through the receipts of the 5K repair bills it has accrued. If for example that 5K includes a recent clutch/DMF change - then that's a 1K+ bill you won't have to worry about for the next couple of years. If it includes head gasket being done - then that's another couple of hundred you won't have to shell out and if fixed properly solves one of the major weaknesses of the TD5. Same goes for the front propshaft being rebuilt (carden joints go bad), air suspension, steering knuckle joints, injector seals or ACE pipework. These are common issues with the D2 and once fixed/attended to - it's rare that those things need redoing again in the next couple of years.

On the other hand, if the bills tend to repeat themselves (indicating recurring faults that are not solved) and/or be all sorts of things which don't fall under the 'they all do that at some point' category - then move on. There are plenty of Disco 2s around to choose from and you can be picky.
Thanks for that reply mate. He is asking £2500 for it. He has just spent 1k on something (im not sure what till I see him next) and not used it since. Think he is a tad scared of it. Maybe it Is a bad one! I am going to think about it, as much as I like the idea of it, I don't want a headache!

ScoobyChris

2,261 posts

223 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
I reckon a Land Rover should be on anyone's bucket list to own and if this one is a good price (is it down to shed money?) and you know its recent history and what's been fixed, it seems a lot less risky than buying one off Autotrader.

Might still throw big bills, but if it becomes uneconomical to repair, at least there'll always be a market for turning it into spares and repairs wink

Chris

Register1

2,279 posts

115 months

Wednesday 14th February 2018
quotequote all
You gotta' be nuts to buy an old Td5
Seriously, don't buy it.
Especially don't buy it from your boss.

Just don't

At that age, just buy a Land Cruiser, seriously.


R1