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This collection holds printed technical reference material for Land Rover and Range Rover vehicles. That covers workshop and service manuals, Haynes repair guides, OEM parts catalogues with part numbers and exploded diagrams, factory electrical circuit diagrams, and restoration guides. Everything here is a physical publication, not a digital file or download.
The range spans the full Land Rover production timeline. Classic-era models, including Series 1, Series 2 and 3, and classic Defender, are strongly represented with both OEM parts catalogues and independent workshop manuals. Modern models including Freelander, Discovery, and Range Rover Classic to Range Rover P38 are covered by Haynes manuals and factory service publications.
OEM parts catalogues carry RTC, STC, BA, and LTP reference codes and give the exact part numbers and assembly diagrams that workshops use for accurate fitment identification. These are the same publications Land Rover dealers and independent specialists used from the factory. Where Haynes manuals give procedure-level service guidance (torque settings, service intervals, strip-down sequences), the OEM catalogues give part-number-level identification. The two types complement each other rather than overlap.
Buying GuideThe correct manual depends on what you need it for. Two distinct use cases drive most purchases here.
For workshop and repair work: A workshop or service manual gives you the procedure. Haynes manuals cover the most common service and repair operations for each model, with clear step-by-step sequences and torque specifications. Factory workshop manuals, where available, go deeper into electrical systems and engine overhaul. The engine overhaul and V8 rebuild manuals in this collection are suited to workshop use rather than general ownership reference.
For parts identification and ordering: An OEM parts catalogue is essential. Part numbers on classic Land Rover components are not always obvious from visual inspection alone. The factory catalogues list every assembly in exploded-diagram format with call-out numbers that map directly to part codes. This matters particularly for Series 1 and early Series 2/3 vehicles, where small production variants (wheelbase, engine, body type, build year) can affect which part fits.
Wiring and electrical diagrams: Electrical circuit diagram publications are a separate category. The factory wiring diagrams in this collection show complete circuit layouts with connector locations and wire colours. These are the reference used by auto-electricians working on fault diagnosis rather than general mechanics.
Cross-reference the model year, engine code, and body style before ordering a parts catalogue. Several editions cover overlapping production years with different content. For classic Defender, the break between 200Tdi and 300Tdi variants matters for engine-bay components. For Range Rover Classic, the 1970 to 1985 catalogue covers a different specification range from the later 1985 to 1994 editions.
Reference publications are model and year specific. A Haynes manual for a 1990 to 1998 Defender is not interchangeable with one for a Freelander 1 or a Discovery 3. Before ordering, confirm the following.
Background reading on the classic Land Rover models most heavily represented in this collection, including engine variants, production history, and the component differences that affect parts identification.
Series I engine variants (IOE petrol, diesel), chassis and drivetrain changes across the 1948 to 1958 build run, and the parts differences that matter for accurate restoration work.
Series 1 production and parts guideCommon faults, chassis and bulkhead corrosion points, brake system changes, and engine differences across the 1958 to 1985 Series production run. Useful context for parts catalogue interpretation.
Series 2/3 restoration and parts guideCore service items across Land Rover and Range Rover models. Useful for understanding service intervals and part replacement schedules referenced in workshop manuals.
Land Rover service parts guideComponents for Series II, IIA, and III models (1958 to 1985).
Series 2 and 3 partsParts for Defender 90, 110, and 130 (200Tdi, 300Tdi, Td5, and 2.4 TDCi).
Classic Defender partsParts for Range Rover Classic (1970 to 1994), V8 and TDi variants.
Range Rover Classic partsDiagnostic and installation tools for Land Rover maintenance and repair.
Land Rover workshop toolsThe full Budget Parts catalogue: mechanical, electrical, and body components.
Full parts catalogueAll publications in this collection are physical printed books, manuals, or catalogues. Nothing here is a digital download, PDF, or software file. The one exception is a single CD-ROM product for Discovery (1989 to 1994), which is a physical disc rather than a download. All other items are printed publications supplied by post.
A Haynes manual is a workshop and repair guide produced by a third party based on strip-down procedures. It gives service intervals, torque specifications, and step-by-step repair sequences. An OEM parts catalogue is a factory publication showing every component in exploded-diagram format, with part numbers and assembly references. The two serve different purposes: use a workshop manual for service and repair guidance, and use a parts catalogue to identify the correct part numbers and assembly positions before ordering. Many owners and workshops use both.
The product listing states the model, year range, and where applicable the engine or body variant. For classic Land Rover models, small production changes between years can affect which parts apply. The Range Rover Classic catalogue covering 1970 to 1985, for example, covers a different production specification from editions covering 1986 onwards. For Series vehicles, check the build year and engine type (petrol or diesel, specific capacity) before ordering. If you are unsure, the part number listed in the catalogue can be cross-referenced against the chassis plate or build records.
LTP (Land Rover Technical Publications) sets are official factory-sourced publications, not third-party reproductions. The Genuine classification on these items reflects that they originate from the Land Rover supply chain. They typically cover wiring diagrams, parts catalogues, and workshop manuals as a compiled set for a specific model range, and are used by marque specialists and restoration workshops as the primary technical reference.
The collection currently covers Haynes manuals for Defender, Freelander 1, Series 2A and 3, Discovery 3, and Range Rover Classic. Not every Land Rover model has a current Haynes edition in print. Discovery 1, Discovery 2, Range Rover P38, and some Freelander 2 variants have had Haynes editions published historically; availability varies. Check the current collection for in-stock titles and lead times. Items showing a 2 to 3 week lead time are available to order but require sourcing.
Yes. For classic models (Series, classic Defender, Range Rover Classic), printed workshop manuals and wiring diagrams are frequently used alongside modern scan tools and oscilloscopes. The factory wiring diagrams in this collection give circuit layout and connector reference information that modern diagnostic software does not always replicate for older platforms. For post-1996 vehicles on OBD-II systems, fault code references and live data interpretation are typically handled by diagnostic software, while the printed manual covers mechanical procedures and component identification that software does not replace.
Updated: June 2026. Reference material for Land Rover and Range Rover manuals, parts catalogues, and wiring diagrams. Haynes manuals published by Haynes Publishing.