Marque: Land Rover - Company History & Models - Cars By Brand

Land Rover
To In 1948, the very first Land Rover hit the road – and the off-road. It was intended to be a stop-gap vehicle by the Rover company, who had to find a way to use-up aluminium in those austere post-war years in order make money through export. Based unashamedly on the WWII Wilys Jeep, it was designed for use by farmers or indeed anyone who needed to get to parts of the countryside where there…
Land Rover Defender 110
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1990-1998 - Bodywork:
Three/five door estate with a variety of commercial vehicle body options - Engine:
2495cc four-cylinder Tdi 107-111bhp; 3528cc V8 petrol 134bhp - 0-60 mph:
18 - Top Speed:
78 mph - MPG:
22-27 mpg
PAST: At the end of 1990, the term ‘Land Rover’ was changed to refer to the vehicle manufacturer, not the vehicle itself, and so the 90 and 110 became Defenders. The specification had really started to rise by now with an ever-growing options list and also, the diesel revolution had started as buyers realised that the huge torque output and much better mpg figures, far outweighed a bit of a rattle at tick over.
PRESENT: The Government is determined that the large 4 x 4 is the centre of all evil without considering that some drivers actually need the extra seats/load capacity/abilities. As such, many people who need to lug large loads are going to be looking back to mid-term 110s as a practical alternative.
FUTURE: Current climate is going to make the 110s from this era increasingly desirable. Don’t wait too long though.
Land Rover Defender 90
Fast Facts
- Produced:
1990-1998 - Bodywork:
Three/five door estate with a variety of commercial body options - Engine:
2495cc four-cylinder Tdi 107-111bhp; 3528cc or special edition3947cc V8 petrol 134-182bhp - 0-60 mph:
18 - Top Speed:
80 mph - MPG:
23-29 mpg
PAST: When fitted with the Discovery 200Tdi engine, the performance was much improved over the old 90, getting to 60mph some seven seconds sooner whilst being around five mpg more frugal at the pumps. Though of the same capacity and almost the same power and torque outputs, the 300tdi available from ’94, was very different and added to the driveability with increased reliability.
PRESENT: The Defender 90 is probably the most desirable ‘proper’ Land Rover, having the benefit of a chunky, ‘let’s off road’ appearance, but still being able to cut-it on road as well, whether it’s on the motorway or the push and shove of town traffic. The limited edition SV 3.9-litre V8 models are glorious – if you can afford the fuel costs – but for most the trusty and lusty diesels will be a better bet, especially for towing work.
FUTURE: Because of its present must-have status, you’ll pay a premium for this model. As such, take extra care when checking for off-road damage, rust and poor build-quality (both still a Land Rover problem well into the ‘90s).