A vast majority of the general public think these are just called Range Rovers and not Land Rover Range Rover. They think that Range Rover is the make and model.
Is that an Eagle in front in the second shot? Eagles have always interested me... the first time I saw one I thought it was an awkward 90s Jaguar, just because of the animal badge
our general convention is to include year, make, model and bodystyle for every post, but sometimes those things have a little redundancy, or maybe they just read awkwardly. in addition to the tags, note that this information is usually included in the url.
The Rang Rover was never a "military truck" it arrived from the "Road Rover" project of the 1960's where a coil sprung 4x4 chassis was being developed by the Land Rover arm of Rover/Leyland/British Leyland. The body wasn't even designed to to be used on the final project, however it looked so good at the prototype stage it was given production rights. It was never sold as a Land Rover and always badged as a Range Rover
7 comments:
A vast majority of the general public think these are just called Range Rovers and not Land Rover Range Rover. They think that Range Rover is the make and model.
Range rovers are the first military trucks.
Is that an Eagle in front in the second shot? Eagles have always interested me... the first time I saw one I thought it was an awkward 90s Jaguar, just because of the animal badge
Ben can you label this Land Rover Range Rover? You added Land Rover to the tags though interestingly enough.
joey, thanks for keeping us on our toes!
our general convention is to include year, make, model and bodystyle for every post, but sometimes those things have a little redundancy, or maybe they just read awkwardly. in addition to the tags, note that this information is usually included in the url.
cheers!
Best part about this gen is the solo/sometimes quad round headlights. They look perfect on them.
The Rang Rover was never a "military truck" it arrived from the "Road Rover" project of the 1960's where a coil sprung 4x4 chassis was being developed by the Land Rover arm of Rover/Leyland/British Leyland. The body wasn't even designed to to be used on the final project, however it looked so good at the prototype stage it was given production rights. It was never sold as a Land Rover and always badged as a Range Rover
Post a Comment