dirtyoldman
I'm now on Medicare,officially old.
The basic design of the V8 started life as an early '60s aluminum Olds engine,didn't it?
Really small V8,maybe about 225ci 
Really small V8,maybe about 225ci 
Really small V8,maybe about 225ci 
The basic design of the V8 started life as an early '60s aluminum Olds engine,didn't it?Really small V8,maybe about 225ci
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The basic design of the V8 started life as an early '60s aluminum Olds engine,didn't it?Really small V8,maybe about 225ci
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I wanna say 3.5L/215cu in Buick.
If somebody made an LS/4L60E conversion kit for all of the late 90s and newer Range Rovers, it might just solve a ton of problems. I could deal with the electrical gremlins.
The old inline six engines in the 90 up Defenders were built like a tank.

The 2.8 is common in Euro versions along with the crappy V8s. Very few Defenders were ever imported and sold in the US... Most here have been imported privately. Every one I have seen here was gasoline powered. Diesels are not that popular here.The old inline six engines in the 90 up Defenders were built like a tank.
The only inline-6 engine fitted to the Defender I can remember was a DOHC 2.8L from BMW only in a few ones assembled in South Africa after the V8 was phased out. The Defender is currently available only with a 4-cyl Diesel, but there is no automatic transmission not even as a premium option![]()
If somebody made an LS/4L60E conversion kit for all of the late 90s and newer Range Rovers, it might just solve a ton of problems. I could deal with the electrical gremlins.
I was going to suggest getting it and dropping an LS3 in it. Problem solved.
On a side note, when you say over heating, is it boiling over or is the gauge just reading high? If so sounds like a faulty gauge.
Also, a radiator flush doesn't mean much, it could still be blocked. Use the IR thermometer to check for cold spots on it.