Land Rover Discovery 4 TDV6
3.0-litre successor to the 276DT with the same structural crankshaft bearing weaknesses. Timing chains and injectors add further problem areas. Engine replacement costs of Β£5,000βΒ£10,000 are a real possibility. Very short oil change intervals (max. 8,000 km) are mandatory. Only buy with complete documentation.
TDV6 3.0: Solid pull with risk
The 3.0-litre V6 torque sits on a pleasant plateau in the mid-range. The Discovery chassis makes good use of that power on poor surfaces. A complete service history is not a recommendation with this engine β it is a requirement.
Engine Weaknesses 5
The 306DT inherits the narrow crankshaft design of the 276DT. Bearing shells spin in operation and block oil galleries. Service bulletin SSM71816 covers 3.0L versions as well. Engine replacement costs Β£6,000β12,000.
Symptoms: Rhythmic knocking from the lower engine block (worse under load), oil pressure loss, metal particles in the oil filter
From around 80,000 km the 306DT chain tensioners and guides can wear. Rattling on cold start is the typical early warning. Left unattended, chain jump and engine damage follow.
Symptoms: Metallic rattling on cold start (disappears once warm), check engine light, P0008/P0016/P0017
Certain 306DT injectors can over-fuel, causing extreme heat buildup in the cylinder and piston melting. Metal particles from the resulting damage destroy other engine components.
Symptoms: Individual cylinder power loss, rough engine noise, fault codes on individual injectors, metallic sounds
The 306DT has the same problematic oil cooler as its predecessor the 276DT. Oil-coolant cross-contamination is possible. Regular inspection of the coolant for oil traces is recommended.
Symptoms: Oil traces in the coolant reservoir, coolant loss, rising engine oil level
The oil pump pressure regulator valve can fail and deliver insufficient oil pressure. Frequent oil changes (max 10,000 km interval) with quality oil are essential for prevention.
Symptoms: Oil pressure warning, engine noise, code P06DD (oil pressure regulation)
Vehicle Weaknesses 9
The air suspension compressor is the Achilles heel of the L319. Leaking air springs or valve blocks overload it until it fails. Early models with the Hitachi compressor are particularly vulnerable.
Air springs on the front and rear axle become porous after 8β12 years. Air escapes slowly β vehicle sags after standing. Ignoring this damages the compressor and valve block.
Brake pipes corrode from the inside due to road salt and unfavourable clip mounting. Swelling pipes restrict brake flow or burst. Safety-critical and MOT-relevant.
The electric actuator for the inner tailgate breaks β the Bowden cable connector typically snaps. Tailgate can no longer be opened. Actuator (FUG500010) is inexpensive and readily available.
Sunroof drain hoses become blocked at the A-pillar or kink. Rainwater runs into the interior β often into the passenger footwell. Well-known issue with a Land Rover service bulletin.
Front lower control arms and anti-roll bar bushes wear and produce knocking and clunking at low speed. Wheel alignment wanders.
The handbrake system with its separate drum rusts and seizes, particularly when the vehicle has been left with the handbrake on for an extended period. Cables snap, shoes weld themselves to the drum.
The hydraulic steering rack loses power steering fluid through leaking seals. Oil traces visible under the vehicle, steering becomes heavier, pump noise increases.
Rear anti-roll bar bushes and drop links wear and cause clunking and vague cornering. Typical symptom after 80,000β120,000 km.
Reports & Tests
36 owner complaints filed with NHTSA (2004β2017). Most reported: Fuel System (13), Fuel System (8), Gasoline (8).