Luxury Cars Guide
๐Ÿ“‹ In This Guide

Mercedes M278 vs Range Rover V8 (AJ133): Reliability Comparison

Sun Feb 15 2026
Reliability Score: 50 /100

Common Failure Points & Costs

Component Failure Mileage Symptom Est. Cost (USD) Risk Level
Timing Chain Issues 60k - 100k miles M278: Check valves/tensioners. AJ133: Guide wear/slack. Mercedes: $3k - $5k | Range Rover: $5k - $8k High
Piston/Cylinder Health 80k+ miles M278: Scoring risk (Fatal). AJ133: Generally robust liners. Mercedes: $15k+ (Engine) | Range Rover: N/A Critical
Cooling System 50k - 70k miles M278: Turbo lines leak. AJ133: Valley pipes burst. Mercedes: $1,500 | Range Rover: $2,500 High
Induction System 100k miles M278: Turbo wastegates/seals. AJ133: S/C Isolator rattle. Mercedes: $4,000 (Turbos) | Range Rover: $1,200 (Snout) Medium

Reliability Verdict

The Mercedes M278 is a 'silent killer'โ€”it runs beautifully until it scores a cylinder or leaks oil into the wiring harness. The Range Rover AJ133 is a 'loud killer'โ€”it rattles (chains) and smells (coolant). The AJ133 is higher maintenance, but the M278 has a higher risk of total engine write-off due to Alusil scoring.

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Mercedes M278 vs Range Rover 5.0 SC (AJ133): The V8 Showdown

You are buying a used luxury flagship. You want a V8. You are looking at a Mercedes S550 / GL550 (M278 Engine) and a Range Rover Supercharged / Sport (AJ133 Engine).

Both are depreciated titans. Both are fast. Both have terrifying reputations. Which one will bankrupt you first?

This guide compares the Mercedes M278 4.7L Twin-Turbo V8 against the Jaguar Land Rover 5.0L Supercharged V8.


1. Engine Architecture

FeatureMercedes M278Range Rover AJ133
Type4.7L Twin-Turbo V85.0L Supercharged V8
InductionTurbos (Lag, then torque)Supercharger (Instant torque)
BlockAlusil (Silicon-Aluminum)Aluminum with Iron Liners
InjectionDirect InjectionSpray-Guided Direct Injection
Common CarsS550, CLS550, GL550, E550Range Rover, Sport, F-Type, XJ

The Key Difference: The M278 uses Alusil cylinder walls (the aluminum is the wall). The AJ133 uses cast-in iron liners. This single difference dictates the long-term survival of the block.


2. The Catastrophic Failure Points

Mercedes M278: Cylinder Scoring (The Silent Death)

The M278โ€™s Alusil coating can degrade. The piston rings drag against the raw aluminum.

  • Result: Scored cylinder walls. Loss of compression. Engine is trash.
  • Risk: Moderate to High (increases with mileage/poor maintenance).
  • Cost: $15,000 - $20,000 (Full engine replacement. You cannot bore it out).

Range Rover AJ133: Timing Chains & Cooling Pipes

The AJ133 doesnโ€™t usually destroy its own block. It destroys the plastic attached to it.

  • Timing Chains: The guides wear out (Pre-2015).
  • Cooling Pipes: They burst in the valley.
  • Risk: 100% (It will happen).
  • Cost: $6,000 (Chains) + $2,500 (Pipes).

Verdict: The Range Rover issues are repairable. The Mercedes issue is terminal.


3. Ongoing Maintenance & Annoyances

Mercedes M278

  • Oil in Harness: Cam sensors leak oil into the wiring harness. It wicks up to the ECU and destroys the computer. ($3,000 fix).
  • Turbo Coolant Lines: Plastic lines crack. ($1,500 fix).
  • Timing Check Valves: Early models rattle. TSB fix required.

Range Rover AJ133

  • Supercharger Snout: Isolator rattles. ($1,000 fix).
  • Water Pumps: Leaks every 40k miles. ($800 fix).
  • Injectors: Seize in the head. ($3,000 fix).

4. Driving Experience

  • Mercedes M278: Effortless, quiet wave of torque. The turbos mute the sound. It feels like a relentless shove. Great for Autobahn cruising.
  • Range Rover AJ133: Violent, loud, theatrical. The supercharger whine + distinct V8 exhaust note. Throttle response is instant. It feels like a muscle car engine in a tuxedo.

Winner: AJ133. It has more character.


5. Which One Should You Buy?

The Case for Mercedes (M278)

Buy the Mercedes (S550/GL550) if you want a smoother daily driver and you plan to verify the engine health with a compression test before buying. 2015+ models are generally reliable if they donโ€™t score.

The Case for Range Rover (AJ133)

Buy the Range Rover if you want character and you are willing to perform preventative maintenance.

  • If you replace the cooling pipes with aluminum and verify the timing chains (or buy a 2016+), the AJ133 is actually a very durable block. The iron liners make it far more resistant to piston scuffing than the Mercedes.

Final Verdict:

  • Reliability Winner: Mercedes M278 (Marginally, due to fewer external leaks).
  • Longevity Winner: Range Rover AJ133 (The block outlasts the M278 block).
  • Wallet Winner: Neither. Buy a Lexus LX570.

Expert Buying Advice

If you want a car you can fix for $3k every 2 years, buy the Range Rover (post-2015). If you want a car that might run 150k miles with nothing OR might blow up tomorrow, buy the Mercedes. We slightly prefer the AJ133 for DIYers due to lack of bore scoring risk.