Hello All,
I was fortunate enough to spend a week in Botswana and another in the Kruger park in South Africa. Spoke to many of the lodges about perhaps adopting the IG as their overlanding vehicles/ game drive vehicles and work vehicles. They currently all (but one outfit) use Landcruiser 70 series trucks. The lodges in Botswana are extremely remote - 45 min flight time via Cessna Caravan and one required a ferry ride to bring vehicles in to the Okovango. They service their own vehicles. Oil changes and air filters every month or 100 hours and full transmission and break fluid flush annually. The fleet of Landrover at Londolozi (2014-2016, 110 Defenders) have a similar maintenance schedule.
Speaking with the management team they cited the lack of parts quickly available for the IG, cost and the retraining required to maintain these vehicles. They see them as expensive and niche/ exotic in Africa. The lodges in Botswana have no plans to even consider IG as a working vehicle solution. The mining industry in SA seems to have the same view apparently. Ineos needs to make inroads into large industry, the farming and the mining sector. If China doesn’t buy a MASSIVE amount of Grenadiers in the next 2-3 years, old Jim may be forced to shut it down to prevent further hemorrhage.
This is really concerning given the soft global sales so far. What are your opinions regarding this? D
I was fortunate enough to spend a week in Botswana and another in the Kruger park in South Africa. Spoke to many of the lodges about perhaps adopting the IG as their overlanding vehicles/ game drive vehicles and work vehicles. They currently all (but one outfit) use Landcruiser 70 series trucks. The lodges in Botswana are extremely remote - 45 min flight time via Cessna Caravan and one required a ferry ride to bring vehicles in to the Okovango. They service their own vehicles. Oil changes and air filters every month or 100 hours and full transmission and break fluid flush annually. The fleet of Landrover at Londolozi (2014-2016, 110 Defenders) have a similar maintenance schedule.
Speaking with the management team they cited the lack of parts quickly available for the IG, cost and the retraining required to maintain these vehicles. They see them as expensive and niche/ exotic in Africa. The lodges in Botswana have no plans to even consider IG as a working vehicle solution. The mining industry in SA seems to have the same view apparently. Ineos needs to make inroads into large industry, the farming and the mining sector. If China doesn’t buy a MASSIVE amount of Grenadiers in the next 2-3 years, old Jim may be forced to shut it down to prevent further hemorrhage.
This is really concerning given the soft global sales so far. What are your opinions regarding this? D