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The Range Rover L322 spans three distinct engineering eras, and each carries different engines, gearboxes, electrical architecture, and failure patterns. Treating all L322 models as one platform leads to incorrect diagnosis, incorrect parts ordering, and unnecessary cost.
This guide separates the platform into BMW-era, Jaguar-era, and late-era vehicles, then maps the most common faults to the correct mechanical family. That distinction is what makes diagnosis on the L322 accurate.

| Era | Years | Petrol Engine | Diesel Engine | Gearbox |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BMW Era | 2002-2005 | BMW M62 V8 4.4 | BMW M57 Td6 3.0 | ZF 5HP24 (petrol) / GM 5L40-E (diesel) |
| Jaguar Era | 2006-2009 | Jaguar AJV8 4.4 NA / AJ34S 4.2 SC | Ford/Jaguar TDV8 3.6 | ZF 6HP26 |
| Late Era | 2010-2012 | Jaguar 5.0 V8 NA / 5.0 SC | Jaguar 4.4 SDV8 | ZF 8HP70 |
The M62 V8 petrol uses the ZF 5HP24, while the M57 Td6 diesel uses the GM 5L40-E. The 5L40-E is more susceptible to solenoid wear and valve body fatigue where servicing has been neglected.
Delayed cold engagement and harsh upshifts under load are common early signs. In many cases, valve body and solenoid replacement resolves the complaint before internal rebuild becomes necessary.
All variants use the ZF 6HP26. The mechatronic unit is the main failure point, with symptoms including harsh downshifts, refusal to engage forward gear from cold, solenoid circuit faults, and limp mode on a fixed gear.
Battery condition and earth straps must be checked before condemning the mechatronic unit. The 6HP26 is highly sensitive to low supply voltage, and sub-12V conditions can trigger misleading transmission faults.
These models use the ZF 8HP70. At this stage, faults are more often linked to software level and supply voltage than to internal wear. Confirm IDS software is current before hardware diagnosis.
The factory "lifetime fill" language should not be treated as permanent in real-world use. Fluid condition and level should be checked by about 80,000 km.
Applies to: BMW Era M57 Td6, Jaguar Era TDV8 3.6, Late Era SDV8 4.4
Does not apply to: Petrol V8 or Supercharged variants
Power loss with smoke on diesel L322 models usually falls into two categories that must be separated before any parts are replaced.
Carbon-loaded EGR valves are common after prolonged low-speed or urban operation. A valve stuck partially open reduces combustion efficiency and often causes progressive power loss with black smoke under load. Cleaning or replacement is the correct repair. EGR deletion is not a valid road-going repair in the EU.
This is a separate fault and is especially documented on the 3.6 TDV8. Internal cooler cracking allows coolant to enter the EGR path, causing white smoke on cold start, sweet exhaust smell, and coolant loss with no obvious external leak. Pressure testing and cooler flow inspection are required before return to service.
All turbo diesel variants can suffer split charge-air hoses and clamp-joint leaks after repeated heat cycling. This produces sudden power loss, sometimes with surge noise under boost. Pressure testing under load is more reliable than visual inspection for finding small splits.
Applies to: BMW Era M62 V8 petrol (2002-2005) only
The M62 V8 uses plastic coolant distribution housings and transfer pipes. On vehicles now over 20 years old, brittleness is routine. Failures often present as coolant loss with rising temperature and little or no obvious external leak.
Cracks can form at moulded joints or within the housing wall itself. Sealant is not a valid repair. Replacement with improved aluminium or reinforced alternatives is the correct solution.
The CPS is a known no-start and intermittent stall cause on the M62. The failure often starts as cold-start hesitation, then progresses to hot-restart no-start. P0335 or P0336 may appear, but the fault can also present with no meaningful DTC.
CPS resistance testing and waveform capture under cranking should be performed before fuel pump or ECU diagnosis. Many vehicles have had more expensive parts fitted when CPS was the real cause.
Applies to: All L322 variants
The L322 Combined Instrument Pack fails in a consistent pattern, usually through dry or cracked solder joints on the PCB. Symptoms include gauge loss, missing fuel or coolant readings, pixel drop-out, and warning lamps that do not match a real mechanical fault.
Before cluster repair is considered, two diagnostic steps are mandatory: battery load testing, and inspection plus torque verification of all main earth straps. The L322 is particularly sensitive to supply and earth-path quality, and poor voltage stability can mimic cluster failure exactly.
If supply and ground health are confirmed, PCB reflow resolves many failures. If reflow has already been attempted or the board is beyond repair, replacement or professional rebuild is the next step.
Applies to: All L322 variants
The L322 EAS system includes a Wabco compressor, central valve block, four air springs, five height sensors, and nylon air lines. Each component fails differently, so diagnosis must isolate the exact source before parts are ordered.
The most common fault. A corner sinks over hours or overnight, usually due to cracking at the bellows fold or bead seat. Height sensor PID live data should be checked before parts replacement.
Typical signs are a compressor that runs but cannot build pressure, or fails to run at all. Current draw testing is required before replacement. High draw points to motor wear. Zero draw with good relay function points to upstream wiring.
L322 models used different compressor variants through production. These are not direct plug-and-play substitutes without the correct software update. Always confirm which unit is fitted before ordering.
Valve block leakage causes slow deflation with no compressor noise during the drop. Height sensor faults usually cause incorrect levelling or sensor circuit DTCs. Linkage and connector problems are common and should be checked before replacing the sensor body.
Applies to: All L322 variants, with EPB rear caliper seizure most common on post-2006 vehicles
Premature rear pad and disc wear on the L322 is often caused by Electronic Park Brake rear caliper seizure rather than normal driving style or vehicle weight. Corrosion in the screw-driven actuator causes partial brake application even when the vehicle appears to drive normally.
A useful diagnostic step is thermal comparison after a run. Seized rear calipers tend to leave rear disc temperatures noticeably higher than the front under normal use.
On diesel variants, reduced servo assistance is often caused by vacuum pump wear or degraded vacuum hose supply. This is regularly confused with master cylinder failure. Vacuum should be measured at the servo inlet before master cylinder replacement.
Post-2006 L322 Sport variants use larger front discs with four-pot fixed calipers. Disc size and caliper type must be confirmed before ordering. Incorrect disc specification creates poor pad contact and repeat failure.
Applies to: All eras, but root cause differs by production year
The main failure is usually float arm fatigue within the in-tank sender assembly. The gauge may over-read at part fill or drop rapidly from half-tank to empty. The sender is integrated into the pump module and usually requires assembly replacement.
These vehicles more commonly suffer fretting corrosion at the tank-side connector. This causes erratic readings that change when the connector is moved. In many cases, cleaning and re-pinning solves the issue without pump replacement.
Applies to: All eras
The L322 front suspension uses a double wishbone layout. Lower balljoints are safety-critical wear items, and any measurable lateral play under load is a replacement point, not a monitor item.
Subframe-to-body mounts degrade with age and can create steering vagueness and front-end knocking. Anti-roll bar drop links are also common wear points and often cause sharp-input knock over broken surfaces.
Applies to: All eras
The rear multi-link arrangement develops wear at rear subframe mounts, trailing arm bushes, and lateral arm bushes. Each produces a slightly different symptom pattern.
Rear subframe mount wear often causes clunking under acceleration and braking load change. Trailing arm bush wear can lead to toe change under load and accelerated inner shoulder tyre wear. Lateral arm bush wear tends to produce rear-end vagueness.
Applies to: All eras, with chain wear more common on high-mileage BMW-era vehicles
The L322 uses a BorgWarner chain-driven transfer box. Chain and sprocket wear can produce driveline shudder between roughly 80 and 110 km/h, especially on higher mileage or regularly towed vehicles. This can be confused with propshaft imbalance.
Propshaft centre bearing wear is also common. The two-piece arrangement uses a rubber-mounted centre bearing, and deterioration often causes motorway-speed drone or vibration that changes with throttle load.
Universal joint wear usually presents as a clunk on drive take-up or direction change. Not all joints are greaseable, so routine inspection is important during major servicing.
Budget Parts supply Range Rover L322 parts for owners and independent workshops across Europe from the Netherlands. The range reflects common real-world L322 failure patterns, not generic catalogue listings.
| Symptom | Most likely L322 area | Years most associated | First check |
|---|---|---|---|
| Harsh or delayed shifts | Automatic transmission family mismatch or wear | 2002-2005 Td6, then facelift cars by gearbox type | Confirm exact engine and gearbox before any parts decision |
| Restricted performance, black smoke | Diesel charge-air, EGR, or boost leak issue | Mainly diesel L322s | Pressure-test intake and inspect hoses before replacing valves |
| One corner sinks overnight | EAS air spring or valve block leak | 2006-2012 especially common in ageing suspension systems | Leak test first, compressor second |
| Slow to rise, suspension inactive | Compressor output, relay, or compressor type issue | 2006-2012 | Confirm Hitachi vs AMK setup and software status |
| Knock over bumps or on lock | Lower arms, ball joints, bushes | Across the platform, especially high-km vehicles | Inspect front lower joints and arms before chasing rear bushes |
| Fuel gauge inaccurate or dead | Fuel sender circuit fault | 2010-2012 most notably | Check sender harness pins for fretting corrosion |
| Multiple warning lights, odd module behaviour | Low system voltage or charging fault | All years | Battery at rest and charging voltage first |
| Vibration through floor under load | Propshaft centre support or driveline wear | Ageing vehicles across range | Inspect centre support before replacing unrelated driveline parts |
The Range Rover L322 used three distinct gearbox families across its production run. BMW-era petrol V8 models (2002-2005) used the ZF 5HP24 five-speed automatic. BMW-era Td6 diesel models (2002-2005) used the GM 5L40-E five-speed automatic. All Jaguar-era variants (2006-2009) used the ZF 6HP26 six-speed automatic. Late-era models (2010-2012) moved to the ZF 8HP70 eight-speed automatic.
The most common cause is dry or cracked solder joints on the Combined Instrument Pack printed circuit board. This causes gauge failure, pixel drop-out, or warning lamps that do not reflect a real mechanical fault. Before replacing the cluster, always verify battery condition under load and inspect main earth straps, because poor voltage supply can create the same symptoms. If supply is healthy, PCB reflow often resolves the issue.
A sagging corner is most commonly caused by a failed air spring with cracked bellows, but valve block leaks, compressor wear, and height sensor faults can also produce similar symptoms. Use a diagnostic tool to read individual height sensor PID live data and confirm whether the system is losing air or failing to build pressure.
Premature rear brake wear is often caused by Electronic Park Brake rear caliper seizure. Corrosion inside the actuator mechanism causes continuous partial braking force. Compare disc temperatures after a run. If the rear disc is significantly hotter than the front, the caliper is likely dragging and should be repaired before fitting new pads and discs.
On BMW-era M62 V8 petrol models, the crankshaft position sensor is a frequent cause of no-start, especially hot-restart no-start. P0335 or P0336 may appear, but the fault can also present without useful codes. Test CPS resistance and cranking waveform before investigating more expensive fuel or ECU faults.
The fix depends on production year. On 2002-2009 models, float arm fatigue inside the sender is the most common cause and usually requires replacement of the in-tank pump and sender assembly. On 2010-2012 models, fretting corrosion at the wiring connector is more common and can often be solved by cleaning or re-pinning the connection.
Published: June 2025 | Last updated: April 2026
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