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Doodle



Member Since: 02 Nov 2013
Location: Midlands
Posts: 127

United Kingdom 
Pot holes...... or is the L322 stronger



I believe my old 322 is stronger and more robust than the 405.

In late summer, this one collided with a speeding tennis ball or two!!

No one was hurt and the offending balls were returned to their owner. Shocked

For sure the 322 is more robust. Too much road biased on 405, but I guess that's what most owners want them to be.

Any guess on cost of repairs, or would it be broken for parts?

(Not from this picture or vehicle, I have offside F and R suspension struts, height sesnsors and other parts available FOC)

Post #416602 4th Dec 2016 6:07pm
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UK Marine



Member Since: 22 Jul 2016
Location: Durham, County Durham UK
Posts: 816

England 2003 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

What other parts?

Regards ______________________________
Simon
______________________________

Range Rover Classic 3.5 efi - Gone
Range Rover Classic 3.9 efi - Gone
Range Rover Classic 4.2 LSE - Sadly gone
Land Rover 110 3.5 - Gone
Range Rover P38a 4.0 SE - Pleased it's gone
Range Rover P38a 2.5 DHSE - Just sold
Range Rover L322 4.4 v8 Petrol - Current

Post #416608 4th Dec 2016 6:27pm
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Alistair



Member Since: 11 Feb 2011
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United Kingdom 2013 Range Rover Vogue SE SDV8 Santorini Black

Based on the crash test results that Pete posted on this thread I'm happy with the L405.

There's more to it than 'strength' - and rigidity is probably a bad thing.....

Post #416609 4th Dec 2016 6:28pm
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caymanblack



Member Since: 08 Dec 2015
Location: DEVON
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United Kingdom 2017 Range Rover Autobiography SDV8 Carpathian Grey

If you did not opt for the open sunroof this would have been just a scratch.













Wink

Post #416624 4th Dec 2016 7:10pm
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Doodle



Member Since: 02 Nov 2013
Location: Midlands
Posts: 127

United Kingdom 

Simon, I have pm'd you regarding struts, wishbone, sensors and associated parts for 405.
I will be posting them in the appropriate section later this week.

Post #416725 5th Dec 2016 12:43pm
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CS



Member Since: 14 Apr 2015
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Scotland 2017 Range Rover Autobiography 5.0 SC V8 Corris Grey

When I did the Solihull tour I asked about 405 vulnerability compared with the 322. I was told that specialist repair centres were being established to deal with the more complex task of repairing aluminium cars. The experience at that time was that 405s were more likely to be written off after an impact, as there was less scope for repairs and where repairs were possible they would probably be more expensive. Only Range Rovers since 1988

Post #416733 5th Dec 2016 1:28pm
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UK Marine



Member Since: 22 Jul 2016
Location: Durham, County Durham UK
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England 2003 Range Rover Vogue 4.4 V8 Zambezi Silver

Cheers Doodle Thumbs Up ______________________________
Simon
______________________________

Range Rover Classic 3.5 efi - Gone
Range Rover Classic 3.9 efi - Gone
Range Rover Classic 4.2 LSE - Sadly gone
Land Rover 110 3.5 - Gone
Range Rover P38a 4.0 SE - Pleased it's gone
Range Rover P38a 2.5 DHSE - Just sold
Range Rover L322 4.4 v8 Petrol - Current

Post #416740 5th Dec 2016 2:20pm
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mzplcg



Member Since: 26 May 2010
Location: Warwickshire. England. The Commonwealth.
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United Kingdom 2014 Range Rover Vogue SE SDV8 Corris Grey
Re: Pot holes...... or is the L322 stronger

Doodle wrote:
For sure the 322 is more robust.


Questionable. They still crumple in all the design areas to protect the passengers. Heavier, yes. More robust? I think probably not.

Doodle wrote:
Too much road biased on 405, but I guess that's what most owners want them to be.


You bet! Better the car absorbs any impact than me. I recall many years back being hit from behind. I was in my Triumph Dolomite sat still at lights and a milk float (electric thingy) ran into the back of me. I was off work for almost 2 months whilst my back recovered.

Now, compare that with last week when I was hit from behind in a L405 by a BMW. Again I was sat still at lights when I got an almighty shunt which has done me no physical harm whatsoever. The Range Rover did its job, i.e. it protected me. it was also a loaner whilst mine was in for service so even better. But, whilst the outward damage looks minor the crash beam behind the bumper skin is bent and the bodywork it's bolted to has some deformation. All that energy would have been transferred to me in an older car and I would probably have been injured.

Note that L405 in your picture still has the passenger cell intact. Everyone would have walked away from that at a guess. That same crash in a Defender would probably have killed the occupants.

Post #416742 5th Dec 2016 2:26pm
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neo



Member Since: 23 Aug 2009
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England 2013 Range Rover Vogue SDV8 Santorini Black

In general Ali is 'better' than steel wrt the desired dynamics during the crash pulse and energy deflection.

Ali is extensively used on some of the cheaper super and hyper cars as the 'collapsible' bit and typically bolts onto the carbon tub.

But it's not just about the primary impact. Safety cell need to be strong and resist several impacts - high strength steel and carbon are preferred for that.

Ladder chassis has some inherent advantages, but it doesn't crumple well to absorb energy unless it has been designed to (D2 chassis and P38a chassis where designed to crumple).

Fundamentally though I'd suggest L405 is a better place to be than L322, crush standards and technology have moved on (look at tesla and side impact - far superior performance if you ignore the potential lithium-ion bomb your sat on).

L405 roof crush is designed to exceed 3X vehicle weight, L322 wasn't.

L405 has specific sacrificial components to deal with more types of crash.

L405 has been designed to have more torsional rigidity than L322 - and L322 was a huge step up from P38a in this regard.

However, Newtonian laws of physics still apply - if you bigger/have more mass than what you hit, then you are in the better place (I'm referring to the second law here).

This is born out in reality, a bigger vehicle will generally always push a smaller vehicle some way backwards in a head-on (I'm referring to the third law here).

Would be interesting to see what would happen in a L322 head-on into a L405. I suspect your chances of survival and less injury are higher in the more modern L405.

Post #416811 6th Dec 2016 12:15am
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