Give Nathan a call in my Signature, he buys/sells/and restores all makes/models of Rovers and I am sure this has come up. He should have a solution for you.
Sounds like either a loose shifter linkage or a bad park sensor. Shouldn't be too hard, take center console apart (about an hour, adjust or replace switch, then an hour to put things back together).
This issue sadly is not many people own the Evoque and post on the forums. I am not a mechanic by trade nor are very many of the forum members. I would also look on rangerovers.net to see if anyone has seen this issue. Remember to goal of any forum is to help, even if that means sending you...
Having worked on many Rovers and a lot of other vehicles as well. I would start by purchasing a new battery. I have an old school battery tester that puts a load on the battery. I have tested and it shows battery Voltage drop instantly. Autozone said battery was good. Purchased a new...
If it is the Original battery it is bad, any battery can hold a 12v charge, but when a load is put on it, it will fail. If you haven't changed the battery, just plan on starting with that option.
After helping work on a couple flood vehicles, I agree with John 100%. Reflect on this and decide how much money you want to throw at this Rover. Figure $1000 minimum per Module on average, plus Full engine/trans/diff flushes and wiring harness change, carpet replacement etc. This will be...
Wow lots of data and questions. This is my opinion -
1.) Utilitarian size - Many vehicles fit this role, some better than others as you mention
2.) Towing - Something small could be towed with a VW Golf - Keep in mind tongue weight and gross weight when looking at a real towing vehicle and...
Atlantic British should get you all the part numbers you need, you do not have to order there, but they do have reasonable prices https://www.roverparts.com/
Some great reviews of this cam: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08D99FZ29/ref=redir_mobile_desktop?_encoding=UTF8&aaxitk=eabbd1ffe8075129bf9428cf6262a9c4&hsa_cr_id=5302433970701&pd_rd_plhdr=t&pd_rd_r=2c87f91d-53dc-478f-9899-df4de04703ac&pd_rd_w=6i02A&pd_rd_wg=UCQzo&ref_=sbx_be_s_sparkle_mcd_asin_0_img
If you ever decide to go on the Kentucky Bourbon Tour, stop in at Platinum auto group and have Nathan program it. You could even call him to double check if it is possible. 90% of all their service and sales is Land Rover. Even the Local LR dealership sends customers to him.
Not sure if the current models do the same, but all the older models have been prewired for heated windshields even if not equipped. The only down side is to make it work you have to program the vehicle for it and/or add a button.
Unless I am mistaken that sounds off. I can't find my notes for some reason, but The rear should be 10mm or 15mm higher than the front. The rover will look and be lower in the front.
Sounds more like a suspension issue, The headlights should be correctly adjusted, but if the back end of the Rover is low or the front is high it will put the headlights very high. If your headlights are truly off that much I would take it to a shop and have them adjust so you stay legal.
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