- Either of these tough SUVs have a life of 250,000 kms easily, if not 300,000 kms. In terms of reliability, all three will be the equivalent of a Toyota Corolla (well, almost). A Montero with 30,000 - 40,000 kms on the odo has only lived 15 - 20% of its life.
- There is no doubt that the Montero is superior to the Fortuner & Pajero (it's older sibling) in nearly every way. The ride quality is the best (a sore point with the Fortuner), and the handling is safe. With the facelift, Mitsubishi softened the suspension for ride comfort, and the facelift doesn't feel as agile as the older Monteros, yet its still safe and predictable (has more bodyroll though). In terms of interior quality, equipment, comfort and overall build, the Montero blows the 20 lakh SUVs away to smithereens.
- Therefore, the question is : Should you buy a used, supremely reliable 50 lakh SUV at 1/2 the cost, or a brand new 20 lakh SUV? You can't go wrong with either. However, as an informed car enthusiast, you
especially should tap the value in pre-owned purchases. Remember, you are getting a vehicle that's used only 15% at 50% of the cost. People who don't know about cars, or can't tell a good example from a defective one, should go for the new. But you are more than capable of zeroing in on a clean Montero, hence my recommendation.
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Originally Posted by Parm Montero is expensive to maintain and doesnt sell much in numbers, hardly any resale! |
If we apply a little thought to it, you will see that the "hardly any resale" part actually works in Harbir's favour as he is buying USED.
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Originally Posted by SS-Traveller Reliability would be the #1 requirement for the vehicle you plan to buy. |
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Originally Posted by SS-Traveller But all this can come to nought in Ladakh if a sensor fails, a bearing breaks, an oil seal leaks, a relay short-circuits, the clutch fails or the engine refuses to start. |
The Montero is also supremely reliable. Remember, it has successfully proven itself in treacherous conditions worldwide. Second, the Montero isn't a new, unproven platform. The 4th gen (current Pajero i.e. Montero) was NOT all-new as Mitsubishi didn't have the funds for R&D. It's basically a face-lifted, improved version of the 3rd gen that has been around since 12 years now. The Montero is as much of an abuse-friendly work truck as a Toyota.
I would agree with your point if you were talking about an Audi Q7, for instance. No ways for the Montero...it's built as tough as they come.
But yes, if you break things, it won't be as cheap to repair. Plus, the maintenance costs will be much higher as well (it's a 50 lakh rupee CBU after all).
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Originally Posted by Aroy An old design is at time blessing in disguise. |
Refer to 2nd last paragraph of this post; the Montero is indeed an old design.