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Joined: Apr 2012
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Despite having a supercharged V8 engine, I would hesitate to call my Range Rover a 'sports' utility vehicle. It's quick for something the size of a small library, but it's not a sports car. It's a big 4x4 that does everything very capably.


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Tricky Dicky
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Originally Posted By Neilda
Despite having a supercharged V8 engine, I would hesitate to call my Range Rover a 'sports' utility vehicle. It's quick for something the size of a small library, but it's not a sports car. It's a big 4x4 that does everything very capably.



I'm not totally sure why but I still don't see the Range Rover proper (not the squashed ones) as an SUV to me they are a stylish 4x4 and that has not changed somehow. I have no use for one but would not hesitate in owning one they exude a certain class too unlike any others to me.
We have shedloads of them down here and a couple of the Bentley versions which really do look like a pimps car.


You and MJF clearly have the need and put yours to good use and I think you still have youngsters needing ferrying around with their kit.


2009 4/4 Henrietta
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We are kind of mixing up a couple of things...

Looking at the Cullinan and this size of SUVs we don`t have to think about practical sense - do we?

For the smaller sizes it does matter, what you try to do with these cars? The boot of the estate versions is bigger most of the time when compared to their direct competition mopdel SUVs. Higher mpg and better aerodynamics come with it.

For the small path to the cottage I have to be honest to myself as I can do it as good with the mog as my grandparents did with the Beetle.

We did not mention vans yet. Don`t know what I would have done with three kids without a van. VW Caddy Maxi and the Microbus California. Really good years to remember!

And perfect combination with a roadster, because no matter how you organise. There can`t be more than two on the one side;)

Running a van a roadster is more than welcome on the other side.


Last edited by Mkiss; 20/06/19 09:39 PM.

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Originally Posted By Mkiss


We did not mention vans yet. Don`t know what I would have done with three kids without a van. VW Caddy Maxi and the Microbus California. Really good years to remember!




Ah yes. The minivan. I have a long-lasting friendly debate with my brother-in-law on this subject. We both live in suburban sprawlville, your typical 2.4-kid household; neither of us is in the habit of driving through rivers or over mountains. He has had a succession of SUVs, currently he drives a Chevy Equinox. It's a capable enough vehicle, but for the size of the thing is really not very spacious on the inside. Previously he had a Honda Pilot, which is built on the same floorpan as my Odyssey.

There's no doubt that the minivan provides vastly more versatile and useful interior space. In my opinion - and this is absolutely a personal preference) the driving position and dynamics are better in the van, and the fuel economy is better too.

I am now the slightly reluctant owner of two minivans - I'm on my second Honda Odyssey (the first, at only 11 years and 200,000km, was barely run-in but it wasn't economical to adapt the seating for a disabled passenger in a car of that age) and its stablemate is a Mazda5. I bought the 5 to replace a point-and-squirt hatchback I used for commuting: my sole purchasing criterion was that I wanted the smallest vehicle I could find that had a sliding rear passenger door. I'm not a huge fan of the Mazda - it was a run-out model in the Canadian market as (though they're still made) they're no longer imported here - it's a lot more tinny than the Honda, and is noticeably harder on its tyres, too. But it suits my needs extremely well, being big enough to carry a handful of people, a dog and a wheelchair and small enough to park easily in the tight spaces behind my office.

I cannot see a circumstance where I would choose to own an SUV of any kind, but they are absolutely everywhere and there are obviously enough folks who can see the advantages that I plainly cannot, since they sell so well.

Which brings us back to the topic of the post, with Rolls jumping on the bandwagon: I saw a Cullinan on the road here just a couple of days ago (supplied by Rolls Royce Motor Cars of Quebec, the licence plate holder said) and I must say that, approaching it from the back, my first thought was that somebody had imported a new London Taxi before I saw the badge on the boot lid. It is, IMO, an edifice with almost no redeeming design features. In particular, the awful stepped line across the tail lights across the top of the tailgate is absolutely hideous and makes the back end look like a complete afterthought.


Doug
1985 4/4 4str, Jubilee Blue
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