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YeahThat vehicle is like a land barge! Its "butt" hangs over the rear wheel so much!
I know what you mean
YeahThat vehicle is like a land barge! Its "butt" hangs over the rear wheel so much!
But still, Land Rover were selling around 75,000 Old Defenders each year in the UK.Not a well-executed launch but overall could have been worse.
That historical connection with an older vehicle is tough to replicate with a new brand that basically copied and improved the design of the old one. Not a criticism here, just an observation.
I don't live on a farm and I'm not doing extreme offroading. Purpose Built is a great tagline and allows Ineos to defend some of the design choices (Soft steering, Turning radius, Return to center, etc) but it needs to be more tolerable as a daily driver.
People who expected the Grenadier to only or also be a daily driver seem to get criticized a lot but I think Ineos will find that 'intended use' isn't going to sell enough vehicles.
I bet they wouldn't be selling that many now.But still, Land Rover were selling around 75,000 Old Defenders each year in the UK.
Whilst I had a couple (including a V8) these were awful vehicles on the road.
I use mine as a daily driver with no issues. If however, a city driver was to ask my opinion I would suggest there are more suitable SUVs for town driving if that was in fact what they had purchased a 4x4 for.Not a well-executed launch but overall could have been worse.
That historical connection with an older vehicle is tough to replicate with a new brand that basically copied and improved the design of the old one. Not a criticism here, just an observation.
I don't live on a farm and I'm not doing extreme offroading. Purpose Built is a great tagline and allows Ineos to defend some of the design choices (Soft steering, Turning radius, Return to center, etc) but it needs to be more tolerable as a daily driver.
People who expected the Grenadier to only or also be a daily driver seem to get criticized a lot but I think Ineos will find that 'intended use' isn't going to sell enough vehicles.
This slide is from the/looks like a slide book "Crossing the Gap" from the ninetys, slightly modified as the gap is missing. It also describes that from the "Early Adopter Phase up to the "Late Majority" the company should not take care about customer problems but it should sell, sell, sell to gain market leadership. From the "Late Majority" phase take care about customer problems.I've been at a conference. This slide was posted up by a surgeon, who pointed out everyone wants to be an innovator, but nobody wants to court failure.
IMO Ineos have struck the right balance in their new vehicle launch.
And better to be called an early adopter than a laggard!
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The "G" is not just for people who desire extreme off road 4x4.Lets face it the UK is not exactly a 4 wheelers paradise. Numbers to watch are the US, OZ, and other remote 4x4 centric places in the world. Most people just do not need this level of 4x4. Last weekend I was punching through 4 feet of snow towing a caravan behind my Power Wagon. I might be one of those out liars I mean our Power Wagon and 4 Runner are the only rigs I have not dismembered. The 4 Runner I chickened out on using too hard,( its being sold for the Grenadier purchase) and the Power Wagon has plenty of dents but survived. The Nissan Titan did well, but looked like the Toyota Truck from Top gear when I got rid of it. But I have destroyed MANY Monteros and an Xterra for sure.
I think the UK is more about the towing and utility aspects of the vehicle.Lets face it the UK is not exactly a 4 wheelers paradise. Numbers to watch are the US, OZ, and other remote 4x4 centric places in the world. Most people just do not need this level of 4x4. Last weekend I was punching through 4 feet of snow towing a caravan behind my Power Wagon. I might be one of those out liars I mean our Power Wagon and 4 Runner are the only rigs I have not dismembered. The 4 Runner I chickened out on using too hard,( its being sold for the Grenadier purchase) and the Power Wagon has plenty of dents but survived. The Nissan Titan did well, but looked like the Toyota Truck from Top gear when I got rid of it. But I have destroyed MANY Monteros and an Xterra for sure.
You might be surprised. Agreed the UK is not a 4 wheeler paradise, but in my 13 house street there are 3 new Defenders, 2 old ones, 3 double cab pickups and the rest are the usual BMW/Mini/Audi sh1tboxes.Lets face it the UK is not exactly a 4 wheelers paradise. Numbers to watch are the US, OZ, and other remote 4x4 centric places in the world. Most people just do not need this level of 4x4. Last weekend I was punching through 4 feet of snow towing a caravan behind my Power Wagon. I might be one of those out liars I mean our Power Wagon and 4 Runner are the only rigs I have not dismembered. The 4 Runner I chickened out on using too hard,( its being sold for the Grenadier purchase) and the Power Wagon has plenty of dents but survived. The Nissan Titan did well, but looked like the Toyota Truck from Top gear when I got rid of it. But I have destroyed MANY Monteros and an Xterra for sure.
I thought the F150 sells at a rate of 50,000 units per month.Teslas cybertruck is facing a recall of 11,688 units in the US (only). The handover of the cars begun in 11/2023.....seems to be far more successfull than other Pick-ups...
AWo
Yes but punch above our weight.That graphic is incredible. Didn’t realise Britain was so small in comparison.
I didn't say more successfull than the F150, did I?I thought the F150 sells at a rate of 50,000 units per month.
I thought "more successful than other pickups" would have included the F150 and other such models. Maybe I misunderstood your post.I didn't say more successfull than the F150, did I?
AWo