Showing posts with label Jaguar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jaguar. Show all posts

24 Feb 2015

Driving Five Classic Cars In One Day

Recently I attended a classic car rally with of Great Escape Cars where I got to drive five bone-fide classics in one day


I've hired a car from Great Escape classic cars before. It was a 1971 Jaguar E-Type Series 3 V12 convertible and was huge fun to drive over a 24 hour period. This time out I was to spend a day with their fleet of classic motors, driving five olde English (and American and Italian) beauties.

At 9am on a cold but clear winter's day 25 of us arrived at Great Escape's Cotswold base. There were 25 cars available and to save arguing it was decreed that the choice of car would be decided by picking them from a hat - well, actually a hub cap.

Graham Eason, owner of Great Escapes, talked us through the various cars available for the day. The final one was a 1981 Austin Allegro 1.1. Graham had included it because it made for a good talking point, and because I think he secretly has a soft spot for it and hoped some of us would too.

I hoped it wouldn't be on the card as I reached into the hubcap. I'd brought my son, Eddie, along for the day and he wouldn't be too impressed if dad got the Allegro!

Eddie hadn't wanted to go with me, saying it would be boring just driving cars all day. Unlike his dad he isn't a petrolhead but he cheered up a bit when I showed him what car would be our first drive. No, not the Allegro but a 1983 Audi Quattro. Fabulous.

The air wasfilled with white smoke as 25 classics were fired up all at once in the morning chill. Rumbling V8s, shrill V12s, smooth inline-6s, a few inline-4s and my own turbocharged 2.1 Audi.

The Quattro's interior was clad in luscious, almost tiger-stripe, material that shows its age much more than the sharp, boxy exterior that still looks fab today. The engine is eager once the turbo has kicked in and whistles excitedly when the throttle is pressed hard.

What made it successful in its day, as well as those looks, are its handling and grip and the one I drove was still sharp round corners, although the brakes took some getting used to.

Eddie enjoyed that drive and took more of an interest in the fleet when we stopped at a cafe atop a hill, with a glorious view of the Cotswolds.

After tea and cake Graham once more flourished his hubcap and I picked a bright blue 1976 MGB convertible replete with 1.8 litre flat-4 with not many horsepowers at all.

The hood stayed down and we set off, following another car as Eddie's map reading skills are not up to much. Yes, the Great Escape's old school adage filters right down to using maps instead of satnav. Much more satisfying and in this day and age I rediscovered that getting lost really can add to the experience.

The MGB's interior was much more basic than the Audi's. So too was the engine and gearbox. With a crunch as I selected reverse instead of first (not for the last time) we were away.

This time Eddie's face really lit up. He's been a passenger in more than a few powerful and expensive cars but we had real fun for that hour in the humble MGB. Mind you we were getting seriously cold towards towards the end. We wished we'd brought some gloves and hats.

Lunch was held at a posh hotel after which Graham once again brought out the hubcap. Eddie had his sights set on a 1980 Corvette C3 in white but with a bright red interior and whilst I waited patiently he ran round the back and asked if we could drive it.

Triumphant he waved the Corvette card at me and we clambered in. White is perhaps my least favourite car colour but the Corvette in white looks sensational. Climb inside and those razor sharp lines around the front wheel arches look a million dollars.

The cabin is a snug fit but extremely comfortable. Despite being from the early 80s it was fitted with all the mod cons you'd expect from a car today - except for a touch screen. Electric seats, mirrors and windows, cruise control, air conditioning and, as a bonus, flip up headlights.

The Corvette's piece de resistance is its V8 which sounds deep and raw. This doesn't really translate into vast reserves of power but it does ride along well on a swell of torque, which is a good job because the 3-speed auto doesn't change down from 3rd unless you press the throttle really hard.

We had set off with the targa roof panels in the boot and the wind in our hair but after 30 minutes big lumps of hail started to come down. It took about 2 minutes to suss out how they fitted and to lock them into place.

Glad we weren't in the MG any more we set off once again. The hail was coming down in huge volumes and pretty soon the roads were very slippery. The Corvette is confidence inspiring and has light controls but as we drove up a steep hill at 20mph the rear wheels slipped and slid, although it did keep going to the top.

Half an hour later we stopped in a lay-by to drive car number four. The rally was running late so instead of the hubcap we merely swapped cars and jumped into a 1992 Alfa Romeo Spider.

Hail had turned to rain so we kept the hood up and set off. I'm not much of an Alfa fan and the Spider confirmed my prejudice. The switchgear is all over the place and the driving position odd but the car we drove was well maintained and reliable so if Alfas are your thing you'll enjoy a spin in it. I sort of did.

The day's final car was a 1965 Jaguar Mk2 3.4 (not the Allegro - yay!). This was the oldest car we'd driven. The interior is timeless and classic with bakelite switches, proper wood panelling, comfortable seats and the thinnest rimmed steering wheel I've ever experienced.

The Mk2 was smooth and the pace was lazy. It doesn't like being hurried. You just cruise around and soak up the atmosphere. Mind you the steering isn't that tight so you do have to keep your wits about you.

And so we arrived back at the base, bade our goodbyes and thank yous and left. Eddie had had a wonderful day and loved the variety of experiences.  He might not be a petrolhead but he does now have a soft spot for old cars, and the Corvette in particular.

So do I. I got in my modern TT and the steering wheel felt weirdly fat and the controls light as a feather.  Classic cars might be great fun but you really do have to drive them with due respect, and that makes you a better driver.




By Matt Hubbard







29 Jan 2015

2015 Jaguar XFR-S Review

Matt Hubbard reviews the Jaguar XFR-S, a 543bhp, £80k saloon with a great big spoiler on the back

2015 Jaguar XFR-S

The Jaguar XF is now getting on for eight years old, although it received a facelift in 2011. It's available as a saloon and estate and the vast majority are sold with a 2.2 litre diesel engine. The base model costs £33,445. This, the top of the range XFR-S, costs £79,995.

The XF in vanilla trim is a large, great looking, spacious saloon with a fab chassis. It still looks fresh and relevant to the point the new, smaller, XE follows the basic shape and design elements. A new XF will be launched later this year. Spy shots suggest it won't look a great deal different.

The interior of the XFR-S just about stays tasteful, although the blue piping and carbon fibre effect leather panels do their best to make it feel a tiny bit garish. The Ultra Blue paint and the massive carbon fibre spoiler tip the exterior over the edge of tasteful and just about into garish territory.

Mind you, why order a big, fast, loud, £80k Jag in a sombre colour? You can - black, white or silver. Red is also available. Order red or blue. It suits the car's character. Anything else is trying to hide the nature of the beast.
2015 Jaguar XFR-S

The rear seats are capacious and the front seats are very comfortable and electrically adjustable (obviously). I also appreciated the heated seats and steering wheel in the week I spent with it. Night-time temperatures never rose above 1℃ (33.8℉ in American-speak) so the heated windscreen was also something of a bonus.

The interior is trimmed in such a way as only Jaguar knows how. Yes the carbon leather and blue piping is a bit over the top but the leather is soft and the stitching fine, the aluminium looks great, the buttons feel great, the layout is still best in class and the Alcantara that lines the pillars and headlining is sensuously pleasing.

I'll finally admit the infotainment system is showing its age. It does everything perfectly well but takes a while to fire up. The graphics still look good and the satnav and various menus and function work well though.

The Meridien sound system is epic as 825W though 17 speakers should do. The sound is super clear and will keep audiophiles happy. Turn it up loud and, with the bright blue paint and spoiler, you'll be at risk of looking like a very rich yob.

Rich because you'll need to be to buy an £80k saloon that isn't a Mercedes or Porsche, although the nearest Panamera in terms of price is the V6 with a mere 414bhp.
2015 Jaguar XFR-S

The engine in the XFR-S is the same 5-litre supercharged V8 that's seen service in almost all modern Jags and Range Rovers and is on its way to being thought of as one of the best road engines of all time. In this guise it has 543bp and 502b ft of torque and sounds brilliant - with a deep, bassy soundtrack peppered with the occasional spit and crackle.  The XFR-S might weigh 1,987kg but by heck it's fast.

Really, seriously fast. In a straight line and in perfect conditions it'll do 0-60mph in 4.4seconds but introduce any degree of bend or anything other than a perfect road surface and getting all that power down is almost impossible without a hell of a lot of restraint.

Cruise at 60mph and put your foot flat to the floor and it'll spin the rear wheels, find some traction and catapult all the way up to 186mph in the blink of an eye and on a wave of torque and good old fashioned horsepower.

But the challenge of the XFR-S is not driving at insane speeds, which you can't do on the road. It's in taming such a powerful car in everyday conditions.  Drive it briskly time after time, corner after corner and you'll begin to appreciate the true character of the thing.
2015 Jaguar XFR-S

You'll find that the front end is communicative and allows you to feel what the front tyres are doing, producing properly perfect placement. It takes patience and practice but the rewards are plentiful.

The back end requires more patience. By dint of its weight and size, and despite having a bespoke rear subframe, the XFR-S's back wheels can feel distant, which doesn't always inspire confidence.

You feel this every time you drive it, the front end feeling fully under your control but the back having a life of its own. Mind you, the traction control is quick to bring things back into line if you really do make a hash of it.

It's this character that makes the car so appealing. Yes it looks good and the interior is wonderful but the experience of driving it is its raison d'ĂȘtre. 15 grand is a lot to pay over and above the similarly spectacular XFR but the added frisson of power and performance helps make your mind up.

It's not something you'll experience on a test drive though, or even over a weekend with it. It takes time to fully explore the XFR-S in terms of its capabilities, and yours.

Yet it is possible to drive with restraint and enjoy the ride in a relaxing and refreshing way. Despite having 30% stiffer springs over the XFR the XFR-S cruises in as refined manner as you'd expect from a gentleman's express, soaking up the road's imperfections as it goes on its way.
2015 Jaguar XFR-S

I haven't mentioned the gearbox yet. It's the same 8-speed ZF unit found in all XFs and changes when you would expect it to. It doesn't sit in a high gear, engine revving away, when you don't want it to yet it changes down through the gears quickly when you put your foot down.

Over a week with the car it returned an astonishing 15mpg. Perhaps, though, given the XFR-S's capabilities that figure isn't such a surprise. The engine is fantastic but it is very thirsty.

It is a car you'd choose because you fell in love with it rather than by viewing the stats of it and its competition. If you're looking to spend a ton of cash and are in the mood for a super saloon that takes no prisoners you should take one for a whirl. You may just be entranced.

Stats


Price - £79,995
Engine - 5 litre, V8, supercharged, petrol
Transmission - 8-speed automatic
0-60mph - 4.4 seconds
Top speed - 186 mph
Power - 543 bhp
Torque - 502 lb ft
Economy - 24.4 mpg
CO2 - 270 g/km
Kerb weight - 1,987 kg
2015 Jaguar XFR-S

2015 Jaguar XFR-S

2015 Jaguar XFR-S



By Matt Hubbard


27 Jan 2015

Matt's Diary - Supercars, Busted Bearings And Dirty Hands

Since my last diary blog I've said farewell to a Jaguar XFR-S, hello to a Volvo V60 Hybrid, taken a passenger ride in an Audi R8, serviced a motoring journalist's Audi A3 V6 and discovered that my own car has a knackered wheel bearing.

Speedmonkey's Colin filling the Audi R8 with super unleaded

The Jag went back as the Volvo arrived. Driving two such expensive yet unique cars back to back gave me the opportunity to assess the strengths, and weaknesses of each. The 5-litre engine in the XFR-S is an absolute peach. It's so powerful you have to treat the throttle with absolute respect, and you'll never see much more than 15mpg.

On the other hand the Volvo has a bit of an old lag of an oil burner up front and a smooth electric motor in the rear.  The 2.4 litre diesel unit under the bonnet can also be found in the old XC90 and isn't very efficient or quiet in that - by modern standards, however the electric motor has enough go and the battery enough capacity that if you charge it up overnight you can treat it almost entirely as an electric car if you do under 30 miles a day.

In electric mode it obviously doesn't use any diesel but use both engines for max power and you'll see 35mpg. It's bloody quick in full hybrid mode though.

The Volvo is four wheel drive but the Jaguar rear wheel drive. With so much power the Jag's back end is overly lively whereas the Volvo is rock solid. In sub-zero temperatures and with ice on the roads I felt much happier driving the hybrid than I did the 550bhp super saloon. Who'd have thought that?!

My brother and co-writer, Colin, has an Audi R8 for the week and he came down from Cheshire to see me for the weekend in it.  He reported a super smooth cruise on the motorways and an average 26mpg. Not too bad.

It is possible that I was insured for it but we weren't willing to take the risk so I merely sat in the passenger seat for a few runs. It felt supremely well put together and the interior (with optional full leather pack) was rather sumptuous for a supercar.

Indeed the interior is all very sensible although the tech is getting on a bit now - the satnav doesn't take full UK postcodes for example.
The R8's interior

Still it was a wonderful experience cruising around my locale in the R8.

We then strapped a GoPro to the Volvo and went to shoot some video of the R8. Its V8 singing whilst he overtook me sounded awesome.

Once Colin had gone back to Cheshire I was visited by Graham King from OnlyMotors.  Graham has an Audi A3 with the 3.2 V6. He wants to sell it and had asked if I could service it beforehand. He wanted to observe the procedure so he could learn how to do it himself.

My drive is block paved and spacious and I enjoy getting my hands dirty so we arranged for him to bring the car over Sunday afternoon.

Graham arrived with all the parts I told him to buy - oil, sump plug with washer and oil filter and we set to it.  Car jacked up and on axle stands, cup of tea made, tools brought out from the garage.

It was a straightforward job - Audi uses quality components and materials which makes such jobs so much easier than if the manufacturer decides to make life awkward, like hiding the filter deep in the bowels of the engine.

The only faff was removing the large sump guard, which has about 12 fixings. The rearward ones had perished and a bolt twisted clean off when I removed it so I had to zip tie that part in place once I'd finished.
Tools ready to service Graham's A3 V6

After we'd finished I decided to take the TT for a spin as it'd been sat in the garage for 10 days. It was an absolute pleasure to drive and reminded me why I love it.

That was until the front left wheel made a hell of a racket and felt like it was going to fall off whilst flying through a hard right corner.  That reminded me that it'd been making some odd noises under heavy cornering last time I'd driven it.

Back then I'd suspected the bearing was on its way out, something now confirmed in my mind. Luckily I've got the Volvo for a few more days. My mate the mechanic will replace the Audi's bearing this week, hopefully before the Volvo goes back.

Last week's diary column turned out to be pretty controversial, but it was well read. I'll stay away from upsetting anyone for a while but if this is read by enough people I'll turn it into a semi-regular thing.

Cheers

Matt


20 Jan 2015

Jaguar XFR-S First Drive Review

I'm running a Jaguar XFR-S for a week. Here's my first drive review

Jaguar XFR-S
Jaguar XFR-S

The Jaguar XFR-S introduces itself like the bloke in a whacky tie at the office party. Bright blue, bodykit, deep chin spoiler, mahoosive rear spoiler, big wheels, exhaust note like a bull elephant in mating season.

Inside it's the usual XF fare but with accruements such as R-S logos in the seat headrests, dash and on the infoscreen, a carbon effect leather and blue piping (although you can spec red or ivory) in the seats and swathes of aluminium throughout.

You can buy an XF for a shade over £30k but this XFR-S costs £80k. It needs to be an awful lot better than the base 2.2 Diesel Luxury to justify that price tag, especially when you bear in mind the batty XFR, with the same 5-litre supercharged V8, costs just £65k.

Whilst the XFR looks quite a lot like the Diesel Luxury and has the same range of paint schemes available to it the XFR-S can only be ordered in Ultra Blue (garish), Italian Racing Red (garish), white, silver or black. If you order one in anything other than red or blue you are daft.

The whole point of this car is that it stands out. You can spec a much more subtle rear spoiler but why would you? That huge spoiler tells the world you've spent more money on your car than most people earn in three years - which is the point of a car like this.
Jaguar XFR-S
Jaguar XFR-S

So once you've told the world you've ordered a big, brash, fast Jag you want it to be an enjoyable experience, right? It had better deliver.

The XFR-S gets suspension that is 30% stiffer than the XFR's, huge brakes, 20 inch wheels, a firmer, more finely tuned steering rack, and that engine, whilst being the same 5-litre lump, has 550bhp - 47bhp more than in the XFR.

It also gets a unique rear subframe which is meant to improve grip and handling.

As long as you only use 10% of the throttle it goes and drives just like any other XF, which is to say it is very smooth and refined, very comfortable and it steers better than a 2 tonne saloon should.

But give it the beans and the XFR-S turns into the slavering monster that bright blue paint and huge spoiler suggest it is. It is insanely powerful.

On a dry, wide, flowing road it is fun, safe and brutally fast - and it'll spin the rear wheels at anything up to 60mph without trying particularly hard.

In anything other than perfect conditions you have to treat it with kid gloves or else it will catch you out again and again. Traction overcomes grip with such ease even Pastor Maldonado could drift it like a pro.
Jaguar XFR-S
Jaguar XFR-S

The fact the feedback, steering and brakes are as good as they are mean at least you can correct the frequent tail waggling episodes you'll encounter.  At 40mph on a wet road I pressed the throttle just a tiny bit more than I should have which induced a tank slapper that only experience gained from driving many powerful rear wheel drive cars saved me from a backwards excursion into a ditch. And probably the hedge and field beyond that.

If you're from the north of England you'll know what I mean when I say the Jaguar XFR-S will put hairs on your chest.

It does justify the additional expense over the XFR, and it does justify the £50k hike over the standard 2.2 Diesel Premium by dint of how it looks, how it drives and how it makes you feel.

Stats


Price - £79,995 
Engine - 5 litre, V8, supercharged, petrol 
Transmission - 8-speed automatic 
0-60mph - 4.4 seconds 
Top speed - 186 mph 
Power - 550 bhp 
Torque - 502 lb ft 
Economy - 24.4 mpg 
CO2 - 270 g/km 
Kerb weight - 1,987 kg
Jaguar XFR-S

Jaguar XFR-S

Jaguar XFR-S

By Matt Hubbard






19 Jan 2015

Jaguar XFR-S 20 Second Review

The Jaguar XFR-S is an £80k, 550bhp, 2 tonne, bright blue, brutal beast of a car. Here's my 20 second video review which focusses on, well...the sheer power of the thing.


The normal review will be about 10 minutes long and will focus on more than the just the brutality of the thing.



The stats are below.

Price - £79,995
Engine - 5 litre, V8, supercharged, petrol 
Transmission - 8-speed automatic 
0-60mph - 4.4 seconds 
Top speed - 186 mph 
Power - 550 bhp 
Torque - 502 lb ft 
Economy - 24.4 mpg 
CO2 - 270 g/km 
Kerb weight - 1,987 kg

By Matt Hubbard


12 Jan 2015

Jaguar's 2016 Crossover Will Be Called The F-Pace

We've seen the concept, we know the new Jaguar crossover will be powered by the new Ingenium 4-cylinder engines, what we didn't know was its name - until now.


Someone has leaked something. Not a fluid but some information. The new Jaguar SUV/crosssover will be called the F-Pace.

Check out the official image leaked by Jaguar (these things get very confusing, is it an official leak or an unofficial leak and if it is an unofficial leak is the official photo official? Whatever, someone really should think about mopping up the leak with some kitchen paper), with its name emblazoned underneath the F-Type-alike rear light.

Apparently it is categorically not an SUV (that is official, not unofficial because it was said by JLR boss, Ralf Speth) but a crossover, a term beloved of car manufacturers to mean a car that is not good as an SUV off-road but not as good as a saloon on-road. Instead, a crossover is a half-way house which gives an SUV-style drive position and space with saloon-style handling. Got that? Land Rovers are SUVs, Jaguar is not allowed to make an SUV, it has to be a crossover.

Whatever, the Porsche Macan is also a crossover and that is very good at being a car but not quite so good at being an SUV (it cannot, for example, make it round Porsche's off-road course at Silverstone).

The F-Pace will be very similar to the C-X17 concept, which was fantastically good looking inside and out. And seeing as Jaguar hasn't put a foot wrong since the X-Type all the signs are good.

Except the name is awful.  It's really horrible. Some poor old geezer called Fred Pace will be wondering why Jaguar decided to name its new not-an-SUV after him whilst I wonder who on earth came up with the daftest name since Ferrari LaFerrari.

Maybe the name was approved by Monty Python's Silly Party candidate, Tarquin Fin-tim-lin-bin-whin-bim-lim-bus-stop-F'tang-F'tang-Olé-Biscuitbarrel. Yes, I think Mr Fin-tim-lin-bin-whin-bim-lim-bus-stop-F'tang-F'tang-Olé-Biscuitbarrel would approve of the Jaguar F-Pace.

Hopefully seeing as these are early days, and seeing as the leaking seems to be reasonably unofficial (although it could be officially unofficial), it's not too late to change the name to something more sensible.

Stop Press:


After writing the words above the words below were issued by Jaguar. Everything unofficial is now official. The name is officially F-Pace. Damn.


Jaguar has today confirmed it will introduce an all-new model to the Jaguar line-up, to go on-sale in 2016, named the Jaguar F-PACE.

Ian Callum, Director of Design, Jaguar, commented: “We received such an overwhelmingly positive response to the C-X17 concept car last year that we just had to make it a reality.

“The Jaguar F-PACE, inspired by the F-TYPE, represents a perfectly judged balance of performance, style and practicality. It offers a unique combination of Jaguar sports car inspired exterior design, fused beautifully with a thoroughly practical and spacious luxury interior. The F-PACE is our family sports car.”

The Jaguar F-PACE couples class-leading interior space and exceptional on-road dynamics with five-seat usability to produce a true performance crossover. It will encapsulate everything that Jaguar stands for: beautiful design, precise handling, a supple ride, luxurious interior finishes and cutting-edge technology.

Speaking in Detroit, Andy Goss, Jaguar Land Rover Global Sales Director, said: “In 2015 we will celebrate Jaguar’s 80th year. We have started it by announcing our first performance crossover which we consider to be the ultimate practical sports car - a car that builds on the marque’s founding ideals of Grace, Pace and Space to become one of the most innovative Jaguars we’ve ever developed. The F-PACE has now begun its engineering and development testing programme ahead of the new model going on sale in 2016.”

The F-PACE will be manufactured in Solihull, UK.

Further details of Jaguar’s all-new F-PACE will be revealed later this year - #FPACE
 The Jaguar C-X17 concept
 The Jaguar C-X17 concept

 The Jaguar C-X17 concept

 The Jaguar C-X17 concept

By Matt Hubbard


5 Jan 2015

Here's Why Jaguar Land Rover Is The Coolest Car Company Right Now

When I started this writing about cars lark the first company to engage with me was Jaguar Land Rover, and one of the first cars I drove was the magnificent XKR-S

The Jaguar C-X75 which will feature in Spectre
The Jaguar C-X75 which will feature in Spectre

It was a frankly awesome car. Beautiful to look at, incredibly fast and powerful and it sounded like Hades after he'd stepped on an upturned plug whilst going for a wee in the night.

Such is the pace of JLR's progress the XK has been retired due to the popularity of the F-Type, with which it shared a factory. F-Type orders were such the venerable XK was squeezed out. Introduced in 2007 the XK's model life was a mere 7 years. It finished with a flourish with the epic XKR-S GT.
Jaguar XKR-S GT
Jaguar XKR-S GT 

In my time as an observer and writer of cars and the industry in general I've seen and driven many new cars and JLR has been the one company which has never put a foot wrong. It's been on an upward trajectory ever since it was released from Ford's ownership and allowed to flourish under Tata.

The XJ, released in 2009, is probably the only model that doesn't receive near-universal praise. It drives great, has the best interior in its class, has a range of fantastic engines but the rear end looks a bit unfinished.

Consider the other Jag saloon, the XF. Launched in 2007 as a replacement for the horrible Ford designed S-Type (sorry dad if you're reading this (he has one)) the XF is better than the S-Type in every conceivable way.  It still drives better and has a better interior than the competition.

Finishing off the saloon trilogy is the XE, revealed in September 2014,  it looks awesome, inside and out, and will be powered by the new range of Hotfire engines which are more powerful, economical and efficient than those in any previous Jaguar. From a design, efficiency of engines and a residuals point of view it's already on track to be a fleet success.
Jaguar XE
Jaguar XE

One of the jewels in the JLR crown is that supercharged, 5-litre V8 from the XKR-S, which you'll find in the XJ, XF, Range Rover, Range Rover Sport and F-Type. It produces insane amounts of power and sounds the nuts.

In the F-Type R Coupe it produces 550hp and 680Nm.

The F-Type has been JLR's biggest headline success in the two and a half years Speedmonkey has been in existence. Bold, beautiful, fast and selling like hot cakes the F-Type started out in life as a cabriolet then, in November 2013, the coupe was revealed and it was even better looking and drove better than the cabriolet.

Keen to chase down Porsche the F-Type range will expand in 2015 when we'll see a manual gearbox, four wheel drive and even a budget 4-pot version. Oh, and a lightweight RS.

Even the forthcoming Jaguar SUV looks fantastic, something that can't be said for many SUVs.
Jaguar C-X17 SUV concept
Jaguar C-X17 SUV concept

On the Land Rover front the Evoque exceeded everyone's expectations in terms of how it drove, the quality of the interior and how many it sold. Spy shots of an Evoque cabriolet are currently doing the rounds.

The new Range Rover was launched in 2012. It was lighter, faster and better looking than its predecessor, and  the interior quality was light years ahead of the competition. I drove one for a week and its SDV8 engine returned 30mpg! The new RR sells almost twice as many units as the old model.

The Range Rover Sport came along in 2013 and was an even bigger leap over the old model than the Range Rover was.

The Freelander wasn't exactly rubbish but it did lag behind its stablemates in terms of market share, but, according to the reviews, the new Discovery Sport (its replacement) should put paid to that. It will also be the first of a new 'family' of Discoverys, with a separate identity to the rest of the Land Rover range.
Land Rover Discovery Sport
Land Rover Discovery Sport

The Defender, on its last legs, will be replaced in a year or two, but not before a new Discovery in 2016.

Jaguar Land Rover cannot put a foot wrong at the moment.  Its success is down to a great range and a combination of volume models and high-end specials produced by the Special Vehicle Operations divisions of both Jaguar and Land Rover.

Ah yes, the SVO division. Responsible for the F-Type Project 7 which was initially shown as an outrageous concept in summer 2013 and which you can now configure and buy from Jaguar, just like any other car.
Jaguar F-Type Project 7
Jaguar F-Type Project 7

Speak nicely to SVO and they'll make you a bespoke Jag or Landie to whatever spec you want - within reason of course.

Will JLR's ever increasing success end? Well, if they ever lost creative geniuses Ian Callum or Gerry McGovern they'd certainly stumble but with the company hiring non-stop in all departments probably not for long.

I like JLR on a personal level. I've never driven one of their cars and thought it was merely OK, or even a bit rubbish. They make enough profit and have enough confidence about themselves new models are being launched on a regular basis, and with big budgets.

Compare that with the horrible state of the company in the Ford era and you appreciate how much things have been turned around under Tata's parentage.

But surely the coolest thing about JLR as we head in to 2015 is that the baddie in the new Bond film, Spectre, will drive a C-X75.

C-X75 was a concept car that was never made but that Jaguar says has provided them with a wealth of ideas from its R&D stage.  It looked a million dollars and was powered by four electric motors which were recharged by micro gas turbines.

What better halo car for the coolest car company around right now.

By Matt Hubbard



2 Oct 2014

Jaguar XE - More Photos, More Specs, More Prices

Ahead of its appearance at the Paris Motor Show Jaguar has revealed more information about the new XE saloon


The Jaguar XE will be available in five trim levels - SE, Prestige, Portfolio, R-Sport and S, with S being the most performance oriented model.

The XE's engines will see the debut of the new Ingenium units.  Available as a petrol or diesel and all with 2-litres capacity there will be two variants each of petrol and diesel. Full figures are below.

If the Petrol 240's 236bhp, 0-60 in 6.5 and 250lb ft of torque is not enough the XE's engine bay has been engineered to accommodate the V6 from the F-Type. This has 335bhp and does 0-60 in 4.9 seconds.

As well as the familiar ZF 8-speed automatic Jaguar will introduce a new 6-speed manual transmission in the XE.

Prices start at £26,995 for the petrol 2.0i 200 SE Auto and rise to £44,870 for the V6 S.

Full specs and prices are below the photos.
















Technical Data
Jaguar XE 2.0 Diesel 163
ENGINE & TRANSMISSION
Engine capacity (cc)1,999
Cylinders4 in-line
Valves per cylinder4; DOHC
Bore/ stroke (mm)83.0/ 92.4
Compression ratio15.5:1
Fuel injection system1,800bar common rail
Boosting systemSingle variable geometry turbo
Power PS (kW)163 (120) @ 4,000rpm
Torque Nm (lb ft)380 (280) @ 1,750-2,500rpm
TransmissionZF 8HP45 8-speed automatic,
6-speed manual
PERFORMANCE & FUEL ECONOMY
0-60mph (sec)7.9 [man] / 7.7 [auto]
0-100km/h / 0-62mph (sec)8.4 [man] / 8.2 [auto]
Top speed mph (km/h)132 (212)
Fuel consumption mpg (litres/100km)
EU combined
75.0 (3.8) [man] / 71.7 (3.9) [auto]
CO2 emissions (g/km)
EU combined cycle
99 [man] / 104 [auto]
DIMENSIONS & VOLUMES
Length (mm)4,672
Width inc./ excl. mirrors (mm)2,075/ 1,850
Height (mm)1,416
Wheelbase (mm)2,835
Track front/ rear (mm)1,607/ 1,608
Kerbweight (kg)From 1,474 [man] / 1500 [auto]
Boot volume (litres)450 / 455 [no spare]
Fuel tank capacity (usable) litres47

Jaguar XE 2.0 Diesel 180
ENGINE & TRANSMISSION
Engine capacity (cc)1,999
Cylinders4 in-line
Valves per cylinder4; DOHC
Bore/ stroke (mm)83.0/ 92.4
Compression ratio15.5:1
Fuel injection system1,800bar common rail
Boosting systemSingle variable geometry turbo
Power PS (kW)180 (132) @ 4,000rpm
Torque Nm (lb ft)430 (317) @ 1,750-2,500rpm
TransmissionZF 8HP45 8-speed automatic,
6-speed manual
PERFORMANCE & FUEL ECONOMY
0-60mph (sec)7.4 [man] / 7.4 [auto]
0-100km/h / 0-62mph (sec)7.8 [man] / 7.8 [auto]
Top speed mph (km/h)140 (225)
Fuel consumption mpg (litres/100km)
EU combined
From 67.3 (4.2) [man] / 67.3 (4.2) [auto]
CO2 emissions (g/km)
EU combined cycle
From 109 [man] / 109 [auto]
DIMENSIONS & VOLUMES
Length (mm)4,672
Width inc./excl. mirrors (mm)2,075/ 1,850
Height (mm)1,416
Wheelbase (mm)2,835
Track front/ rear (mm)1,602/ 1,603
Kerbweight (kg)From 1,550 [man] / 1,565 [auto]
Boot volume (litres)450 / 455 [no spare]
Fuel tank capacity (usable) litres56

Jaguar XE 2.0 Petrol 200
ENGINE & TRANSMISSION
Engine capacity (cc)1,999
Cylinders4 in-line
Valves per cylinder4; DOHC
Bore/ stroke (mm)87.5/ 83.1
Compression ratio10.0:1
Fuel injection150bar direct injection
Boosting systemSingle monoscroll turbocharger
TransmissionZF 8HP45 8-speed automatic
PERFORMANCE
0-60mph (sec)7.1
0-100km/h / 0-62mph (sec)7.7
Top speed mph (km/h)147 (237)
Power PS (kW)200 (147) @ 5,500rpm
Torque Nm (lb ft)280 (206) @ 1,750-4,000rpm
Fuel consumption mpg (litres/100km)
EU combined
37.7 (7.5)
CO2 emissions (g/km)
EU combined cycle
179
DIMENSIONS
Length (mm)4,672
Width inc./excl. mirrors (mm)2,075/ 1,850
Height (mm)1,416
Wheelbase (mm)2,835
Track front/ rear (mm)1,602/ 1,603
Kerbweight (kg)From 1,530
Boot volume (litres)450 / 455 [no spare]
Fuel tank capacity (usable) litres63

Jaguar XE 2.0 Petrol 240
ENGINE & TRANSMISSION
Engine capacity (cc)1,999
Cylinders4 in-line
Valves per cylinder4; DOHC
Bore/ stroke (mm)87.5/ 83.1
Compression ratio10.0:1
Fuel injection150bar direct injection
Boosting systemSingle monoscroll turbocharger
TransmissionZF 8HP45 8-speed automatic
PERFORMANCE
0-60mph (sec)6.5
0-100km/h / 0-62mph (sec)6.8
Top speed mph (km/h)155 (250)
Power PS (kW)240 (177) @ 5,500rpm
Torque Nm (lb ft)340 (250) @ 1,750-4,000rpm
Fuel consumption mpg (litres/100km)
EU combined
37.7 (7.5)
CO2 emissions (g/km)
EU combined cycle
179
DIMENSIONS
Length (mm)4,672
Width inc./excl. mirrors (mm)2,075/ 1,850
Height (mm)1,416
Wheelbase (mm)2,835
Track front/ rear (mm)1,602/ 1,603
Kerbweight (kg)From 1,535
Boot volume (litres)450 / 455 [no spare]
Fuel tank capacity (usable) litres63

Jaguar XE 3.0 Petrol 340
ENGINE & TRANSMISSION
Engine capacity (cc)2,995
CylindersV6
Valves per cylinder4; DOHC
Bore/ stroke (mm)84.5/ 89.0
Compression ratio10.5:1
Fuel injection150bar spray-guided direct injection
Boosting systemTwin-Vortex supercharger
TransmissionZF 8HP45 8-speed automatic
PERFORMANCE
0-60mph (sec)4.9
0-100km/h / 0-62mph (sec)5.1
Top speed mph (km/h)155 (250)
Power PS (kW)340 (250) @ 6,500rpm
Torque Nm (lb ft)450 (332) @ 4,500rpm
Fuel consumption mpg (litres/100km)
EU combined
34.9 (8.1)
CO2 emissions (g/km)
EU combined cycle
194
DIMENSIONS
Length (mm)4,672
Width inc./excl. mirrors (mm)2,075/1,850
Height (mm)1,416
Wheelbase (mm)2,835
Track front/ rear (mm)1,602/ 1,603
Kerbweight (kg)From 1,665
Boot volume (litres)450 / 455 [no spare]
Fuel tank capacity (usable) litres63
Prices:

ENGINETRIM LEVELON THE ROAD PRICE
2.0d 163PSSE£29,775.00
 Prestige£30,775.00
 R-Sport£32,325.00
 Portfolio£32,975.00
 SE Auto£31,525.00
 Prestige Auto£32,525.00
 R-Sport Auto£34,075.00
 Portfolio Auto£34,725.00
2.0d 180PSSE£30,275.00
 Prestige£31,275.00
 R-Sport£33,025.00
 Portfolio£33,675.00
 SE Auto£32,025.00
 Prestige Auto£33,025.00
 R-Sport Auto£34,775.00
 Portfolio Auto£35,425.00
2.0i 200PSSE Auto£26,995.00
 Prestige Auto£27,995.00
 R-Sport Auto£29,745.00
2.0i 240PSR-Sport Auto£33,095.00
 Portfolio Auto£33,745.00
3.0i S/C 340PSS£44,870.00
By Matt Hubbard