This is going to be long winded, and for that I apologize up front.
I'm presently the original owner in Upstate NY of an '03 D2 with 79K miles on it, all city / highway miles. Any off-road driving up to this point has been over mundane gravel roads, etc. Nothing too adventurous. It has been serviced by Land Rover Amherst (wonderful people!), and has an extended warranty good through August of next year. I'm currently planning a trip west next spring with visits to Death Valley, Bryce Canyon, Yosemite and other points of interest that catch my fancy. And I plan on doing some mild off-road exploration in Death Valley. No rock or sand dune crawling, but I do plan on traveling some of their 4x4 roads to get to some remote locations that sound interesting. So my question is: Do I take the Disco or do I look into an LR4 which, for me at this point in time, is an affordable alternative.
The Disco has been kinda/sorta reliable though it has left me stranded twice within the past year, both times due to starter issues. Once was with a bad starter; the most recent time was due to a bad starter cable. This has not inspired confidence in the beast...
If I keep and take the Disco I would have the Land Rover people look it over, but I was also looking for advice about certain areas that should get more attention than others. I'm not happy with the existing tires (Goodyear Wrangler HPs) which are probably due to be replaced anyway. What would be a good tire for mostly highway driving but with the intention of doing some mild off-roading? Other than my vehicle I really have no data on the reliability (or lack thereof) of Discos I'm also wondering if the LR4 would be a better choice. I certainly like the way the LR4 drives, and it gets better mileage than the Disco (which isn't hard to do). If I keep and take the Disco are there improvements I should make to enhance its reliability?
Any and all comments and suggestions are welcome. My main goal here is to have fun next year and, if at all possible, avoid giving SWMBO the chance to say "I told you so!"...
Thanks!
Bruce
Bruce A. Krobusek
Rochester NY
I'm presently the original owner in Upstate NY of an '03 D2 with 79K miles on it, all city / highway miles. Any off-road driving up to this point has been over mundane gravel roads, etc. Nothing too adventurous. It has been serviced by Land Rover Amherst (wonderful people!), and has an extended warranty good through August of next year. I'm currently planning a trip west next spring with visits to Death Valley, Bryce Canyon, Yosemite and other points of interest that catch my fancy. And I plan on doing some mild off-road exploration in Death Valley. No rock or sand dune crawling, but I do plan on traveling some of their 4x4 roads to get to some remote locations that sound interesting. So my question is: Do I take the Disco or do I look into an LR4 which, for me at this point in time, is an affordable alternative.
The Disco has been kinda/sorta reliable though it has left me stranded twice within the past year, both times due to starter issues. Once was with a bad starter; the most recent time was due to a bad starter cable. This has not inspired confidence in the beast...

If I keep and take the Disco I would have the Land Rover people look it over, but I was also looking for advice about certain areas that should get more attention than others. I'm not happy with the existing tires (Goodyear Wrangler HPs) which are probably due to be replaced anyway. What would be a good tire for mostly highway driving but with the intention of doing some mild off-roading? Other than my vehicle I really have no data on the reliability (or lack thereof) of Discos I'm also wondering if the LR4 would be a better choice. I certainly like the way the LR4 drives, and it gets better mileage than the Disco (which isn't hard to do). If I keep and take the Disco are there improvements I should make to enhance its reliability?
Any and all comments and suggestions are welcome. My main goal here is to have fun next year and, if at all possible, avoid giving SWMBO the chance to say "I told you so!"...

Thanks!
Bruce
Bruce A. Krobusek
Rochester NY