The engine in my Land Rover Discovery Sport has had to be replaced - should I be worried?

I purchased a new Land Rover Discovery sport 2.0 TD4 SE in January 2016. It went for its 1st service in March this year. The dealer said they had detected an engine noise (which I had not). They said that they needed to change the turbo but they were not satisfied with the results and then persuaded Land Rover to change the engine. I am very unhappy and uneasy about this. What do you advise I should do?.

Asked on 14 April 2017 by john jackson

Answered by Honest John
First report of problems with the Ingenium diesel engine. But absolutely brilliant that with no prompting the dealer took the initiative to check the engine properly and ultimately replaced the engine. You should be pleased.
Similar questions
I have a 2010 Vauxhall Meriva 1.4 turbo that's around 41,000 miles. Driving on the motorway last week, it began to lose power and then completely died. Had it recovered by the RAC and taken to a local...
I had to have a new engine in my Volvo V70 D3 after 95000 miles. I was not too happy about it and expressed this to the dealership (who sold me the car with 5000 miles on it and have serviced it ever since)....
You may be interested to know that my 2009 1.4TSi Golf has had a new engine put in it, free of charge. Despite the car being slightly over three years old, Volkswagen admitted "serious component failure"...
Related models
Refined and comfortable. Better off-road than most rivals. Strong plug-in hybrid.