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Land Rover Defender, 90 and 110 Range - 30 Years of the Coil-Sprung 4 x 4 Models

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9781847974532
UPC:
9781847974532
MPN:
9781847974532
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  • Land Rover Defender, 90 and 110 Range: 30 Years of the Coil-Sprung 4 x 4 Models
  • Land Rover Defender, 90 and 110 Range: 30 Years of the Coil-Sprung 4 x 4 Models
  • Land Rover Defender, 90 and 110 Range: 30 Years of the Coil-Sprung 4 x 4 Models Contents
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Description

Author: James Taylor, ISBN: 9781847974532, 208 pages, Hardback, Published in 2013

  • Origins of the coil-sprung Land Rovers
  • Development and production of the Ninety, One Ten and One Two Seven
  • The Defender 90, 110 and 130
  • Special conversions and vehicles built outside the UK, including in Australia and South Africa
  • Military and emergency service use of the coil-sprung Land Rovers
  • The design, the engines and the engineering

When Land Rover switched from leaf springs to coil springs for their utility models in 1983, it was a major step forward. The Range Rover had disproved the received wisdom within the company that greater comfort would encourage drivers to drive too fast in rough terrain and so break the vehicles, and the change improved ride comfort and off-road ability at a stroke.

Land Rover Defender, 90 and 110 Range — 30 Years of the Coil-Sprung 4 x 4 Models charts the evolution of the coil-sprung Defender vehicles. The first coil-sprung model, the One Ten, replaced the Series III 109s. The short-wheelbase Ninety replaced the Series III 88s in 1984, and by then there was already an ultra-long wheelbase One Two Seven on sale as well. By this time, permanent four-wheel drive had become part of the Land Rover DNA, too. From 1990, the models were all re-branded as Land Rover Defenders —90, 110 and 130— as the Land Rover range expanded and the marketing teams wanted a new name. Today, many people call the earlier coil-sprung models Defenders for convenience, although to do so is misleading.

In thirty years of production, the coil-sprung Land Rovers have been available with a bewildering array of engines, gearboxes and body styles, and during the Defender era there has also been a vast number of special editions, both overseas and at home. Manufacture has always been primarily concentrated at Land Rover's traditional Solihull home in Britain, but there have also been many overseas assembly plants, and some of these have produced their own fascinating special varieties of the basic models.

Land Rovers were originally designed as commercial vehicles. As demand for 4 x 4 vehicles for everyday use mounted in the 1980s, Land Rover built steadily on its off-road reputation and image, and developed its core model into an urban warrior as well. Today's Defender is as much at home in the city streets as it is in the desert or on the frozen tundra, and yet it has lost none of its original appeal as a rugged, go-anywhere, do-anything vehicle.

About the Author:

James Taylorhas been writing professionally about cars since the late 1970s, but his specialism has always been the products of the old Rover Company and of the Land Rover company that grew out of it. He has written for specialist Land Rover magazines both at home and abroad, and was the editor of one of them for ten years. He has acted as a consultant to Land Rover itself and is widely acknowledged as the pre-eminent historian of the marque.

James has written more than one hundred books in all, and among them have been several definitive one-make or one-model titles for Crowood. He has also written for classic vehicle magazines in several countries, has translated books from foreign languages, and even delivers effective writing training in both the public and private sectors.

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Additional Information

Condition Sync Code:
1000
Sync Category Code:
261186
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