bmwk12 wrote:
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he has a LWB Transit that he uses to ferry his to kids to school.
Rather good job he only has 2 kids then eh!
The point Will seems to be making is that, for this particular individual, they
are able to successfully use a single vehicle for multiple roles. Doesn't mean every single family would be able to use a Transit for the school run, but then not every single family would be able to use an average family car for the school run either...
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It's called a "sports utility vehicle" because it can perform many functions (hence "utility") and can access areas to which "alternative sports" enthusiasts (like surfers, rock-climbers, and canoeists) may wish to travel.
They are not used off road, the nearest they get in a vast majority is off road parked on the curb.
But does it matter? When buying a vehicle, if you have a list of must-have requirements and you find that the only vehicle that fits all of them is one which also features a bunch of abilities you'll never use (say, for instance, a world-class off-roading capability), then should you turn your back and wait for a manufacturer to build you a vehicle that does everything you do need without doing anything you don't? If a 4x4 fits the requirements of a particular driver despite them never EVER needing to off-road in it, so what.
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The primary purpose of those vehicles is to transport their occupants and contents from A to B, wherever A and B are.
Where is that then, London to Birmingham for example, would you want to do that in slouch 4x4 or a car that will get you from A to b in a reasonable time.
I've lost count of the number of times I've been making progress along the motorway only to be passed quite rapidly by one or another model of 4x4 (usually, but not always, a Range Rover Vogue - they seem to be the BMW of the 4x4 world as far as being driven at excessive speeds in L3, by drivers who think they own the road, goes

)
The only things I dislike about sharing the road with a 4x4 are the lack of through-visibility when following one (though the same criticism can be applied to people carriers, vans, buses, HGVs etc.) and the ease with which their high mounted headlights can blind you if they're tailgating you (though the same criticism can be applied to some people carriers, vans, buses, HGVs etc...). So really, from a driver perspective, I have no reason to specifically dislike 4x4s, and I entirely fail to understand the reasoning of anyone who is capable of holding as strong an anti-4x4 opinion as several of the posters in this thread. They take up no more space than many cars, they drink fuel no faster than many cars, and for many people they are a genuinely practical choice of vehicle for all their requirements - particularly if they don't have the luxury of being able to run a fleet of vehicles each tailored to one specific requirement.