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Originally Posted by Trojan Oh yes that it will be and this 5 door test video really got me hooked! Looks extremely well proportioned.
Now I am seriously considering waiting for the 5 door and there starts the test of patience and difficult decisions! Will/Should I give in or not! |
Yes it sure does look great in the video posted by fellow bhpian Rakesh Ravindran. Great catch by him!
You know the answer to you dilemma as well as i do. Go for it brother!!
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Originally Posted by GTO That's faster than many official reviews  . Wow! |
Thank you so much GTO!
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Originally Posted by Poitive To add further to those: - The COTY entry for Gurkha having the link to this thread.
(that is how I discovered it)
- Manuuj's warm, engaging and extremely helpful manner. |
Thank you brother!
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Originally Posted by Nair.V8 Hi there Manuuj, kudos to you on keeping this post lively. I'm loving the frequent updates! 
I have a quick question regarding the 2.2L 140hp motor .. |
Thank you for your kind words brother! I do not think the 2.2 one will make a comeback at all. There were some issues with having it meet BS6 emission norms. I do not think that the low volumes of Gurkha sales warrants an investment by Force Motors into having it converted anyway.
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Originally Posted by msk_kapoor Thanks Manuuj for keeping great amount of details on new Gurkha registered in this thread. I have some queries below. Sorry for asking a lot  |
Thank you so much for your kind words.
- I can compare the ride quality to my Fortuner and my Endeavour both of which i have driven extensively. The Gurkha has great ride quality and is pretty good at cruising on highways. It lacks the punch and grunt of the Fortuner and Endeavour ofcourse. But the same time you can cruise at 80-100 kmph easily without the Gurkha running out of breath.
- No information on the 3 door getting an autobox but the 5 door very well may get it.
- There are many screens available for the rear window and i have even got one rear windscreen screen which i can affix to the Gurkhas side windows. Yet to test it out though. Maybe just V-cool 100% transparent film can keep the heat out.
- I have already installed a Blaupunkt rear camera. Works very well. I posted about this a few weeks ago in this thread itself.
- For mostly highway driving and mild offroading the Ceats should be just fine.
- sound damping is next on the list of mods planned alongwith speakers upgrade. Leaving the HU as it is.
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Originally Posted by Jagatvir Dear Manuuj, me and my father have religiously followed every update on this thread. I must confess that having followed the thread, it was not long before we too test drove the vehicle and took delivery of the Gurkha on 11.12.2021. |
Thank you for your kind words.
Congratulations on getting your Gurkha. The Plati Alloys do look great and suit the Gurkha a lot and the Bi-xenon fog lamps are a very very useful upgrade! I have the same!
Here is a heads up for you and generally all 2021 Gurkha Owners. (Specially ones made in October or November)
1. Do place clean paper under the car just behind the engine to check for any Oil leaks from the transmission. Its a minor issue and can be easily rectified. Ved ji who is the North India head for Service is aware of the issue and a solution has been found and has already been applied to later manufactured models. Maybe your vehicle being a later one came with the fix already from factory.
2. Power Steering Fluid Pipe may come loose due to vibrations if it is touching the radiator pipe. There is Brass T that connects the pipe carrying the fluid to the Steering Damper. This is where the nut can come loose and power steering fluid may leak out.
My experience from last evening ran like this.
I was about 700 meters from my house when i heard a strange whine coming from the bonnet.
(I know now that it was the Power Steering Motor that was making the noise as the Power Steering Fluid had started running low due to a leak that had developed.)
The steering started feeling very heavy and also the noise increased. By this time I had reached home and I quickly parked up inside.
I looked under the car and realised that a Red Fluid was rapidly dripping out from under Asterix. This i reasoned must be the power steering fluid leaking that caused the subsequent loss of Power Steering.
I called up Ved Ji and he asked me to check the Power Steering Fluid Reservoir. I did so immediately and found it to be almost empty!
He asked me not to drive the car and assured me that he will be with me in the morning with a mechanic from the workshop and Power steering fluid as well.
He arrived in the morning today and the mechanic quickly tightened the nut to the T-Joint that had come loose.
Ved ji told me that it was in contact with the radiator hose and the vibrations of the engine had made the nut come loose over time. This was a design issue with only some earlier Gurkhas and the issue has been resolved in all the later models by relocating the Pipe carrying the Power Steering fluid to the brass T joint further away from the Radiator Hose.
They made the necessary adjustments to the pipes, tightened the Nuts and refilled the Power Steering fluid and bled the system also to make sure there are no air bubbles trapped in the system. We drove to the workshop then so they could take a proper look at everything and also check the Gear Oil Seal fix that had been done sometime back. Post this we took a test drive and everything was working fine again.
Ved ji and Nitesh ji assured me that this issue has been diagnosed and fixed for good now. He further told me that they will check all earlier Gurkhas for similar issues and fix them if found. The entire process of relocating the pipes, tightening nuts, refilling fluid and bleeding the system took barely 30-45 minutes and was pretty simple and straightforward.
As a Gurkha owner I wish this Power steering pipe and the Gear Box Oil Seal leak issue had been diagnosed and fixed during their own vehicle testing process and I as a customer did not have to deal with it. At the same time the response and support from Force Motors After Sales was lightning quick. The issue was diagnosed and fixed very fast. I checked a new Gurkha that was also standing there as well as their own Test drive vehicle and found that the fix of relocating the pipe had already been applied to both of them from the factory itself.
There is some communication gap between the R&D and Production departments at Force Motors and the Aftersales Department is facing the brunt due to this. This needs to be addressed.
Force Motors can ill afford bad publicity by any disgruntled customer left stranded on the side of the road due to these minor design issues that cause these problems. I too was very fortunate that i was only 700 meters from my home when this happened and not on some faraway snowy trail in Spiti or Ladakh.
These pics below may explain things better:
Leaked Power Steering Fluid on the driveway. Asterix is bleeding!!
One can see the fluid leaking everywhere.
The leak is due to the nuts on this brass T joint coming loose.
Since the pipe that carried the fluid was touching the radiator hose it had a lot of vibration that caused the nuts of the T joint to come loose over time and the leak started suddenly last evening.
After the pipes were relocated there was adequate gap between them now and the problem should not reoccur now.
I checked in the 2 other new Gurkhas standing there and found that the issue had been fixed and the T joint was suitably relocated. One can see that even the orientation of the T-Joint in the newer model Gurkhas is different from that in my October manufactured Gurkha.
The whole point of posting about this isn't to malign Force Motors but to have any current 2021 Gurkha owners take a quick look from below the bumper and make sure the Power Steering Fluid Pipe isn't in contact with the Radiator Hose in their vehicles. It is an easy fix at the Force Motors workshop if infact they are touching.
I still continue to be a happy Gurkha customer and to be honest am very happy that the issue had already been diagnosed and fixed at the factory itself in the later batches of Gurkhas that were manufactured after mine was. It just shows that the company is proactively finding niggles and design faults and fixing them too.
I don't know whether its more their bad luck or mine that both issues found their way in Asterix which by now must be the most recognizable and well known 2021 Gurkha with a presence on Team Bhp which is the largest Automotive Forum around. 
It can be a double edged sword. If things are great they will be reported and the Gurkha will gain admiration and similarly if things go bad then that will also come to the fore.