Member Since: 03 Oct 2005
Location: Delft
Posts: 7
Rain makes noise on roof
Since I am living in The Netherlands, where we experience quite some rainy days, I noticed that raindrops make an awful lot of noise on the part of the roof between the front sunroof and the glasspart above the rearseats.
Somehow it seems this aluminium panel is not isolated at all.
You'd better ask the Manchester guys- there are a few forum members from those parts and they will be rain gods.Discovery 3 tdv6 7 seat Buckingham Blue
Had it since new - sold Jun 17 after 12 years and 214,000 miles
3rd Oct 2005 2:08 pm
10forcash
Member Since: 09 Jun 2005
Location: Ubique
Posts: 16534
Rain noise is no match for 'Faithless' at volume level 25
3rd Oct 2005 2:18 pm
BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
Re: Rain makes noise on roof
ekuiken wrote:
Since I am living in The Netherlands, where we experience quite some rainy days, I noticed that raindrops make an awful lot of noise on the part of the roof between the front sunroof and the glasspart above the rearseats.
Somehow it seems this aluminium panel is not isolated at all.
Anyone else with the same experience?
Erik
Try the roof with no sun roof, it sounds like a Jamaican steel band playing, but its a Land Rover, so expect some reality
You could always fit a roof rack and deflect the rain
3rd Oct 2005 4:21 pm
Gareth Site Moderator
Member Since: 07 Dec 2004
Location: Bramhall
Posts: 26775
kevinlally wrote:
You'd better ask the Manchester guys- there are a few forum members from those parts and they will be rain gods.
Yep it does sound like peas in an empty tin!.
Oh, by the way, it did not rain in Manchester today. 8)
3rd Oct 2005 5:06 pm
Lysander
Member Since: 16 Sep 2005
Location: Bedfordshire
Posts: 7
Gareth wrote:
Oh, by the way, it did not rain in Manchester today. 8)
Well there was an Eclipse today...
3rd Oct 2005 9:15 pm
Coffeecup
Member Since: 15 Jul 2005
Location: Middleton, Manchester
Posts: 1084
Re: Rain makes noise on roof
BN wrote:
You could always fit a roof rack and deflect the rain
The roof-rack doesn't help. You just get a ping'ing noise off the Aluminium instead. Coffeecup
March 2005 TDV6 S - Tonga Green - Manual May 2008 TDV6 SE - Stornoway Grey - Auto
Dec 2010 SDV6 XS - Galway Green - Auto
3rd Oct 2005 10:10 pm
Smarticus
Member Since: 01 Jan 2005
Location: Northumberland
Posts: 655
Talking off roof racks - I fitted the standard Land Rover pair of bars this weekend. I was surprised at how insubstantial they feel. Also the "locking" mechanism onto the roof rail feels equally feeble. The rack on a D2 was industrial strength and did the job of carrying up to 5 kayaks very well indeed. The new rack looks and feels as if a couple of kayaks would be its capacity. Why build a 7 seater with bags of interior capacity then design a rack which can carry less than those supplied by Halfords for a Fiat Punto ?! Disco 4 TDV6HSE
Defender 200TDi CSW
RR Evoque
5th Oct 2005 7:53 am
allie
Member Since: 16 Aug 2005
Location: North Wales
Posts: 96
Re: Rain makes noise on roof
BN wrote:
ekuiken wrote:
Since I am living in The Netherlands, where we experience quite some rainy days, I noticed that raindrops make an awful lot of noise on the part of the roof between the front sunroof and the glasspart above the rearseats.
Somehow it seems this aluminium panel is not isolated at all.
Anyone else with the same experience?
Erik
Try the roof with no sun roof, it sounds like a Jamaican steel band playing, but its a Land Rover, so expect some reality
You could always fit a roof rack and deflect the rain
Have not experienced this rain on roof noise yet - despite living in North Wales, roughly 35 miles from Wrexham Allie
A11 EEY
5th Oct 2005 8:01 am
BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
Smarticus wrote:
Talking off roof racks - I fitted the standard Land Rover pair of bars this weekend. I was surprised at how insubstantial they feel. Also the "locking" mechanism onto the roof rail feels equally feeble. The rack on a D2 was industrial strength and did the job of carrying up to 5 kayaks very well indeed. The new rack looks and feels as if a couple of kayaks would be its capacity. Why build a 7 seater with bags of interior capacity then design a rack which can carry less than those supplied by Halfords for a Fiat Punto ?!
The idea is that you do not overload the roof as they have to cover for off road use and tilt angles don't forget. Its not just for the pavement parkers its a real 4x4. Half a ton of gubbins on the roof makes it top heavy and over it goes.
5th Oct 2005 9:05 am
Coffeecup
Member Since: 15 Jul 2005
Location: Middleton, Manchester
Posts: 1084
BN wrote:
The idea is that you do not overload the roof as they have to cover for off road use and tilt angles don't forget. Its not just for the pavement parkers its a real 4x4. Half a ton of gubbins on the roof makes it top heavy and over it goes.
But surely that argument was the same for the D2, but the roof racks on those things would hold serious weight without any issue. The additional weight of the D3 must make it even more able to cope with weight on the roof.
The current roof-rack spec is PANTS. It won't actually allow for the weight of the average male adult before it gets overloaded, which makes it very difficult to load Coffeecup
March 2005 TDV6 S - Tonga Green - Manual May 2008 TDV6 SE - Stornoway Grey - Auto
Dec 2010 SDV6 XS - Galway Green - Auto
5th Oct 2005 9:21 am
BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
Coffeecup wrote:
BN wrote:
The idea is that you do not overload the roof as they have to cover for off road use and tilt angles don't forget. Its not just for the pavement parkers its a real 4x4. Half a ton of gubbins on the roof makes it top heavy and over it goes.
But surely that argument was the same for the D2, but the roof racks on those things would hold serious weight without any issue. The additional weight of the D3 must make it even more able to cope with weight on the roof.
The current roof-rack spec is PANTS. It won't actually allow for the weight of the average male adult before it gets overloaded, which makes it very difficult to load
What was the load on the old D2 anyone remember?
5th Oct 2005 9:24 am
Smarticus
Member Since: 01 Jan 2005
Location: Northumberland
Posts: 655
The D2 roof bars would happily support 2 adults and 4 kayaks (we used to load the boats whilst standing on each bar - albeit with the vehicle stationary). The bars were also a lot wider and therefore if a kayak was to fall off the side when loading, it would be unlikely to hit the side of the vehicle. The D3 roof bars won't take a single adult (its 71kg between the pair and I weigh 85kg) and there is no mechanism to ensure the get a good grip of the roof - they simply sit within a shallow metal indent on the roof rail. They are also a lot narrower than the vehicle and curve down at each end - so their carrying capacity (volume rather than weight) is also far lower. As for danger of tipping over - for normal road use the centre of gravity on a D3 is a lot lower than on a D2 so I would have expected the roof capacity to be a lot higher. It all suggests that Land Rover have designed this vehicle to look good in the brochure (where there are photos of the D3 carrying a pair of skis or a single kayak) rather than be able to do any serious work.....Disco 4 TDV6HSE
Defender 200TDi CSW
RR Evoque
5th Oct 2005 10:48 pm
BN
Member Since: 18 Mar 2005
Location: Here
Posts: 6463
Smarticus in some respects I think you may be correct. However it is an interesting point and needs to have an answer. One difference is that the D2 had a gutter mounted roof rack system and the D3 has built in mounts. Presumably the built in should in theory be stronger, but that leads to the esthetics as you mention.
I think on the other hand the D3 has the ability to be a tool, not just brochure friendly, but the height does restrict easy rack usage and to date no ladder has been officially made or designed.
We need to find out:
What was the tilt angle of the D2
What was the official roof load of the D2
What is the tilt angle of the D3
What is the official roof load of the D3
I know its in the book guys, but I don't have a book on either near me yet at the moment. I am sure Patriot will be working on an excellent roof rack system, but they are expensive. Yes guys I know them as well, sorry, so will call them and see.
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