PhilSN12
Well-Known Member
I had a look at one and thought it was a great car but the boot was a bit small.Skoda Yeti, a hunter here has one he swears by.
I had a look at one and thought it was a great car but the boot was a bit small.Skoda Yeti, a hunter here has one he swears by.
That was my feeling about the yeti... Still need the back seats to be usable and boot space appeared limited..I had a look at one and thought it was a great car but the boot was a bit small.
I had a look at one and thought it was a great car but the boot was a bit small.Skoda Yeti, a hunter here has one he swears by.
I've got a rav 4 and it's a great motor. But mine is the 180ho version. And it's goes well when needed but the mpg is 30-35. But goes where I need it to and it's comfy too.I'm in the same situation.
I'm running a RAV4 58plate at the moment. It was the wife's car so I had it when we got rid of my golf.
I haven't touched the trip in the three years I've had it and does 52mpg.
Goes across fields and tracks no problem. Good load space. Fitted 7 fallow in it the other week.
Toyota kindly put a new engine in it at 96,000 miles due to known head gasket issue.
It's just clocked 200,000 miles
Not sure what to get next.
Maybe another one but possibly petrol as don't want the problem of the engine on the older ones when they are over 7 years old. Toyota won't pay then
I'm also considering a VW Caddy 4 motion but like hens teeth. Bigger all terrain tyres and a 20mm lift kit. I think would be an ideal stalking/shooting and daily motor.
Land Cruiser if you can find a decent one for sane money
Still peeved that Skoda dropped the Yeti from their range! Good solid 4 x 4 and capable of taking a fair amount of punishment...Skoda Yeti, a hunter here has one he swears by.
I agree with what @Heym SR20 said about pickups: only get one if the pick-up configuration is specifically what you need. I am a general builder and a hedge layer. I have a Ranger pick-up. It's absolutely fine and very nice to drive, but from a practical point of view it's not that useful. There is very little load space compared with a van; you can't fit any serious load-carrying roof rack on it; extracting tools from deep inside the load bay is a pain; it's heavy, not that economical and the most useful ones, which have king or supercabs, are hard to find second hand. Most will be four door because it's a tax dodge. But unless you routinely carry more than one passenger, you're sacrificing a massive amount of load space for rear seats which you hardly ever use.Here goes, and I'm sure I'll get lots of different answers but I still want to ask to see if anything pops up I haven't thought about yet.
I'm thinking about changing my car. My use is predominantly social. I head up to Scotland 2/3 times a month to stalk for a day or two at a time. I've also just set up a small pest control/wildlife management business and am thinking whatever I get will be used for that too although it's only low usage level at the moment.
Predominantly I need a 4x4 that will manage the forestry/farm tracks and something that is reasonably economical on the motorway drive up for a couple of hundred miles.
I was toying with the idea of going hybrid, secondhand something like the mitsubishi outlander or volvo xc60 but not sure they'll cut it really on the tracks.
I'm hoping some others have gone through this dilemma and any answers might help in one way or another.
For 4x4 pick up I'm leaning towards the Fiat Fullback/izuzu 1.9/nissan navara?
Thanks in advance...
Skoda Octavia Scout. Big boot, tough, economical.Still peeved that Skoda dropped the Yeti from their range! Good solid 4 x 4 and capable of taking a fair amount of punishment...
Yeah I had an Octavia estate and was great. Scouts are hard to find locally. I am wondering if a volvo v60 or v90 cross country might do the job as I think I've moved away from a pick up...S
Skoda Octavia Scout. Big boot, tough, economical.
I hada Volvo V50 with the 5 cylinder diesel engine. Sold it at 163,000 was still a brilliant engine/gearbox combo. I’m not such a fan of the newer 4 cylinder diesels in the Volvo.Yeah I had an Octavia estate and was great. Scouts are hard to find locally. I am wondering if a volvo v60 or v90 cross country might do the job as I think I've moved away from a pick up...![]()
I picked up a 2004 3-door Land Cruiser last year and it is proving to be a good work horse. Comfortable for long drives, can fit loads in the back with the seats folded away, and really good in mud/snow/off road. It has a locking center and rear diff. I get around 30 MPG average driving around the midlands for work.This.
Best vehicle I ever owned.
I own pick-ups now through necessity, but they are not a patch on the LC.
You can certainly get a lot of car for your money with a V50. I'm selling my Ranger pick-up and considering getting a 4x4 car at a later date. I've looked at V50s but they don't seem to have a lot of ground clearance and they all look to have pretty big rims with low profile tyres. Are there smaller rim options so you can fit fatter AT tyres?I hada Volvo V50 with the 5 cylinder diesel engine. Sold it at 163,000 was still a brilliant engine/gearbox combo. I’m not such a fan of the newer 4 cylinder diesels in the Volvo.
I’m unaware if there is. I think the Cross Country versions are a better bet and they are 4 wheel driveYou can certainly get a lot of car for your money with a V50. I'm selling my Ranger pick-up and considering getting a 4x4 car at a later date. I've looked at V50s but they don't seem to have a lot of ground clearance and they all look to have pretty big rims with low profile tyres. Are there smaller rim options so you can fit fatter AT tyres?