Land Rover LR3: A Cautionary Tale

upperporcupine

ColoRover
I have been a Toyota Land Cruiser enthusiast for many, many years and have owned several Cruisers over the last 25 years including a 40, a 60, two 80s, and currently a 100. The 100 is for sale on Expedition Portal and MUD as I write. I have drooled over LR Defender 110s for years and have been a big fan of the LR3 and LR4 models. I hadn't really considered owning until one came up for sale recently a couple of blocks from my place. The price seemed pretty good and I took a look at it. It appeared to be in good shape with the usual dings and dents, etc., for a 05 with just over 100k miles. I drove it and it seemed pretty good overall, except for a clunking noise up front when going over bumps. There were no warning lights on.

Of course, I have heard and read the horror stories about Rovers. On balance though, a lot of people have really good things to say about the LR3/4 noting an astronomical increase in reliability, great offroad and onroad handling, decent mpg, etc. Considering the positive press and the opinions of a number of Portal members, I decided to proceed with due diligence (e.g., having a reputable independent Rover shop inspect the vehicle BEFORE i made an offer or purchased the vehicle).

I took the rig into a Denver Rover specialist for an inspection. Prior to inspection, I noted the heater did not appear to be working properly, there was a clunking up front, etc. The previous owner had some, but not all records of maintenance and repair.

The inspection was helpful and professional. The estimate to get this LR3 back up to par was more than $4000. Wow. Think about what I could do with $4000 on my Cruiser. The $4000 included: brakes and rotors ($950), front lower control arm bushings with inner and outer tie rods ($1727.00), cracked washer bottle replacement ($225), replace left brake light assembly ($353), 75k and 90k services ($1000), replace heated windshield ($150), and an estimated $150 to diagnose and fix the heater problem.

Despite the work that needed to be done, I was told that I had found a good, clean LR3. I was able to talk the seller down to a price that included roughly ½ of the the work that needed to be done and felt that it was a good deal despite the work it needed. So, I bought it. On the 2 block drive home from the seller’s home to my place, the check engine light came on!

I brought the LR3 into the other reputable Rover shop in town (only because it was much closer to my home) and told them to fix all of the originally estimated work, diagnose the heater problem, and figure out why the check engine light came on. After diagnosis of the check engine light, I was told the coolant thermostat had stuck open and the brake light switch had broken; cost for this ($540). The heater problem was diagnosed as a the servo motor, which was replaced. After replacement, the air blew, but didn’t blow hot; the heater core was the second part of the fix; both fixes ($1380).

So, I had all the work done except windshield and left rear brake light assembly. The total bill was north of $6000. As I completed paying the bill, I was told that the “lifetime” transmission fluid needed to be changed within the next 6-10k miles ($1000). I read up on this and I believe that this is good advice.

So I spent $6K on top of the purchase price - it didn’t seem like such a good deal at that point. In fact, I still have 4 tires and wheels to replace (plan to switch the 19” to 18” for offroad ability and better tire choice), a windshield, a rear brake light assembly, a transmission service, and one of my remote keys does not work.

All that being said, I drove the Rover to Steamboat Springs through a heavy snowfall on very icy roads, and absolutely loved it. I have never driven a full size 4x4 vehicle that handles as well and is so fun and confidence inspiring. The terrain select programming seems amazing as well, adding a good deal of predictability to unpredictable conditions.

So, I am not writing this post to complain about Rover or put down the LR3 platform. It is an amazing vehicle. What I will say is it is not a Toyota Land Cruiser - in terms of cost of ownership. The two vehicles are apples and oranges. I guess what I am concerned about is twofold: First, it seems unusual for a vehicle with only 100K miles on the odometer to need so much work; Second, the cost of parts. Despite these concerns, I am in; I have spent the money and love the vehicle. My hope is to get the second 100K out of it without spending much more (except typical scheduled maintenace).

All in all, I am writing this for all the guys and girls out there thinking about getting into an LR3. It is very tempting, especially with the prices falling so rapidly. If you have your eyes on one and feel like pulling the trigger, do your homework….and plan to add several thousand to your purchase price.


Any thoughts on this?
 
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sedat

Adventurer
Most of that could have been replaced on your own with a few good hand tools if you're handy. there are many people on this forum that are willing to help you.

Its a rover. Proactive vs reactive. Don't wait for problems to arise then ignore them. thats why you footed the POs bill because they failed to stay on top of things. Note something odd? INVESTIGATE!
 

Eniam17

Adventurer
I wouldn't plan on owning it another 100k without putting anymore money into it , especially if you already put that much in. Plus name any vehicle you can drive from 100k to 200k without putting anything into it? And of course it isn't a land cruiser , one is a 40-50k vehicle and one is an 80-90k vehicle.
 

RoyJ

Adventurer
Plus name any vehicle you can drive from 100k to 200k without putting anything into it? And of course it isn't a land cruiser , one is a 40-50k vehicle and one is an 80-90k vehicle.

You should probably say vehicles in the Rover's class. Otherwise I can name a whole bunch that can do it without MUCH repairs (absolutely $0 is unreasonable).
 

Howski

Well-known member
All in all, I am writing this for all the guys and girls out there thinking about getting into an LR3. It is very tempting, especially with the prices falling so rapidly. If you have your eyes on one and feel like pulling the trigger, do your homework….and plan to add several thousand to your purchase price.

Any thoughts on this?
You got a good deal on a truck that needed work now you're complaining about the work it needed? Cry me a river
 

A.J.M

Explorer
You have went about this in an unusual way.
You bought the car then checked up on it, a quick search of this forum would have given you plenty of advice on what to check on the cars.

Also, 2 of your bills are for consumables, eg, brakes and servicing. I'm sure the land cruisers need that done as well.

Windscreen is bad luck sadly, the rear light can be sorted by a replacement from eBay.
Thermostat and the heater is bad luck really.

The front lower wishbones are common wear and tear. Bit steep in price I would think.

Does your bills that come with the car say if the arb bushes or the front wheel bearings have been changed.
Arb bushes are easy to change, it's a driveway job and at most, an hour of your time. I can give you a link if you wish.
You have bought one at that stage where age and miles will have taken effect on the original bushes etc.
So you may need to spend again to sort other bushes in the future. The rear uppers can go as well. Replace with RRS ones as the design is better.

The gearbox oils do need changed every 75-100k, that's the advice from ZF, the makers of the gearbox.

You don't say what spec it is. The beauty if the land rover is plenty of people buy them and have a love for the cars. So any issue you may have, someone will have had it, posted online about it and how to fix it.

A LR is just as capable as a cruiser, they require a different approach to ownership though. They like love and maintenance every so often to be at their best.

Welcome though, have a read through other threads for ideas and things to check as you get used to the car. :)
 

iowalr4

Adventurer
Welcome though, have a read through other threads for ideas and things to check as you get used to the car. :)


This ^ ... +1


Welcome from me also. From what I have seen, Rover owners are more than willing to go out of their way to help. It's a great group in general.
 

pugslyyy

Expedition Vehicle Engineer Guy
Any thoughts on this?

Some of those quoted costs seem really high.

Land Rovers are great vehicles, but you don't buy them for low total cost of ownership or low cost repairs. I firmly believe that the secrets to happy ownership are:

1. Being able to do simple work yourself (i.e. brakes)

2. Having a good relationship with an independent shop that specializes in Land Rovers can help you with the stuff you don't want to do - and also help you when you get hung up on a DIY job.

Or for a completely different approach, there's my story - I own a NAS 110 and an '01 P38. When I saw how much service / upgrades / etc was going to cost me over the life of the trucks I took a completely different approach and opened my own garage.

Good luck!
 

Some Dude

Adventurer
Whatever you do, throw out your previous experience with Toyotas and stop comparing them.

front lower control arm bushings with inner and outer tie rods ($1727.00)
This is insane. I did my own (without TREs) for about $350 including the alignment.
 

unseenone

Explorer
I would suggest identifying a good independent LR or competent shop if you don't plan on doing your own work. You should be able to order your own parts at lucky8llc.com or british4x4outfitters.com and others at a substantial savings.

Good advice on the transmission, you can reduce the costs by fitting a metal pan, so you don't need to replace the entire plastic pan just to change a filter in the future.

Transmission fluids should be done every 60k miles
Transfer case fluids should be changed every 60k miles
Differential fluids should be changed every 30k miles.

Maintenance is always a hassle and expensive...
 

mpinco

Expedition Leader
If you are not hands-on, then maintenance cost will be much higher. (But similar to other brands/vehicles)

Example from above: brakes and rotors ($950)

A full brake and rotor kit can be had for $350 from Atlantic British. That leaves $600 for labor. At a shop rate range of $110 to $130 that is 4 to 5 hours of labor for all 4 corners. A little on the upper end of hours but probably what the book says.

In summary $6000 was $4000 in labor and $2000 in parts, roughly.

............... on a vehicle that has 100K miles on it and is 8 years old
 

upperporcupine

ColoRover
I am really appreciative and open to the feedback/thoughts you all have added so far. I only wish that I was mechanically able, but unfortunately I am not that guy. I had initially planned on doing the brakes myself and looked into the parts, etc. and there was a substantial savings to be had. However, I was told by the shop that I shouldn't mess with the rear brakes due to the electric emergency brake; he said it was really easy to damage the e-brake and would be a much more expensive fix if I did that - kind of scared me off of that project.

Moving forward, I would like to learn basic things and will definitely be leaning on the advice of this community.

One clarification. I love this truck. I am not sorry I bought it (or crying a river :)) I wrote this piece to educate/caution others who may be looking to buy a used LR3 and to get some feedback from those out there that know a lot more than me about these kinds of things.

As soon as I get it cleaned up and tagged, I will post a few photos. BTW - anyone with 18" wheels out there who will part with them on the cheaper side?

Cheers,

Jamie
 

pugslyyy

Expedition Vehicle Engineer Guy
As soon as I get it cleaned up and tagged, I will post a few photos. BTW - anyone with 18" wheels out there who will part with them on the cheaper side?

Cheers,

Jamie

Consider being a bit more specific with your location than "United States" and it may be easier for us to offer specific advice. For example, we are always doing wheel swaps but I have no idea where you are located.
 

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