autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review
autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review

This is the sixth-generation Range Rover, and, well, it doesn’t feel like it needs a reinvention, does it? 

While the new Land Rover Defender was a product transformed and the latest Land Rover Discovery went a bit on-piste compared with its predecessor, what we have here is the same luxury-car-meets-SUV – the sort of model the Range Rover helped to define – only more so. More luxury, more refinement, more size. More technology? More price? Put it this way: “Alexa, how much is this new Range Rover I’m sitting in?” 

Matt Prior | Editor-at-large

“From £99,375.”

Some background, then. The new Range Rover can be had in short or long-wheelbase forms, and both are larger than the versions they replace.

It rides on a new platform called MLA Flex, 80% aluminium but with a steel bulkhead at the front. There are rings of strengthening steel, too, around the lower body at the A-pillar section, and the whole body at the C-pillars and D-pillars, plus around the edges of the front-door apertures. Static torsional rigidity is said to be 33kN per degree – up to 50% better than previoulsy.

The Range Rover was a big car before and remains one now. The standard-wheelbase version is 5052mm long, up 75mm on the last one, with a 2997mm wheelbase, while the long-wheelbase variant adds another 200mm to those totals. The Bentley Bentayga is 5141mm long, the BMW X7 5151mm. The Range Rover is also wide, at 2209mm across the body – seemingly the same width as across its door mirrors.

Most Range Rovers will be five-seaters, but the LWB can be had with an additional row of seats to make seven, or fancy versions can have just four – perhaps with a motorised fold-out table if in LWB form. 

The Range Rover is immediately available as an SV variant from Jaguar Land Rover’s SVO division with these kinds of interior features, so you really can spend as much as you like.

Exploring the Range Rover line-up

The line-up is comprehensive at launch and will rapidly become more so. Engines are mild-hybrid petrols badged P360 and P400, those numbers referencing horsepower; mild-hybrid diesels called D250, D300 and D350; a V8 petrol (P530); and two petrol-electric plug-in hybrids, the P440e and P510e. A fully electric variant is coming in 2024. 

An eight-speed ZF torque-converter automatic gearbox is mated to them all, with a low-range transfer box to aid the off-road capability I will come back to.

The Range Rover rides exclusively on air springs, with no coil option; can raise itself by up to 135mm for off-roading and lower itself by 50mm to ease entry; and has 48V active anti-roll bars, with software that reads the sat-nav to know when corners are coming up and adjust them accordingly. 

Suspension is by double wishbones at the front and a five-link at the rear, with torque-vectoring by braking and an electronically controlled limited-slip differential at the rear as standard. 

There’s also standard active all-wheel steering, with up to 7.3deg of opposing action at low speeds, giving an 11.37- metre turning circle wall to wall – the tightest of any Land Rover and about the same as the Volkswagen Golf’s. 

Also fitted as standard are Land Rover’s Terrain Response II traction and stability control systems, which can adjust the engine and gearbox response as well as chassis electronics off-road, when the Range Rover is in permanent four-wheel drive. It will go to two-wheel drive on road between 21mph and 100mph, unless it’s below 3deg C. 

That’s said to reduce CO2 emissions by up to 4g/km, and the drag coefficient is a relatively slippery 0.30Cd, but nonetheless this is a big, heavy and thirsty car. It weighs at least 2379kg (the short 3.0-litre petrol) and up to 2735kg (a long PHEV). 

I wonder if this car has the broadest emissions range of any vehicle: a PHEV puts out 21g/km of CO2, the 4.4-litre twin-turbocharged V8 270g/km. 

In front of me as I write are 148 pages of description and technical details, and it feels significant that we’re 91 pages in before reaching the section called ‘capability’, and it talks about off-roading. 

autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review

What’s the Range Rover like inside?

Till that point, most things are about refinement and isolation. Among the 35 interior speakers are noise-cancelling functions, including in the headrest-embedded 60mm speakers. The closed-section steel front bulkhead is said to reduce low-frequency vibrations and cabin noise by 24%. There are powered doors and an automatically folding load-space cover. The biggest wheel options, 23in, are said to be no heavier than the old 22s and not detrimental to the ride.

And certainly the cabin feels plush. The front seats are large and perceived material quality is good. Sit in, get comfortable and play with the Pivi Pro infotainment touchscreen that, at 13.1in, is bigger than ever. 

It’s yet another one that’s modelled on a smartphone, Land Rover says, concerningly. As these things go, it’s not too bad; there’s Amazon Alexa voice control and there are separate controls for the heating and ventilation and the terrain response. Although couldn’t they have put a separate rotary dial to cover the lot there instead?

Spaciousness in the front is generous and in the rear really generous. You can even get adults comfortable in the third row of a long-wheelbase variant. There’s not loads of luggage room behind them, but that’s inevitable.

With all three rows in place, there’s 312 litres on the seven seater through to 2601 litres with all the seats flat. The boot-floor cover can lift and lock in a couple of different ways, one of which providing a backrest if you’re sitting on the lower tailgate (it drops down whilethe top hinges up, in traditional Range Rover style).

autos, cars, electric vehicle, land rover, land rover range rover, range rover, amazon, land rover range rover review

How does the Range Rover drive?

I drove several variants across a morning, starting with two long cars and finishing with two short ones.

With the previous-generation Range Rover, I tended to think the short ones were the better cars. Sure, we tested a long one with some posh options against a facelifted Bentley Bentayga recently and it came out on top, and Land Rover will have hardly (you would hope) made it worse with an all-new model. But still, I thought then that the sweeter spot in the Range Rover, er, range, was further down it.

I still think so after a drive in a new P400 LWB and then a long SV model, trying it in both the back and the front seats. Every variant that I tried had 23in rims shod with 285/40 tyres. 

Starting with the LWB, though, is a little inauspicious. Its issues are twofold. For one, if you’re in the back, I’m not sure the ride is up to the job. It’s mostly flat and contained and controlled but gets caught out – as air suspension sometimes is – by sharply poor surfaces and expansion joints.

From the front, things are better, but there’s still a niggle. The steering is beautifully smooth and accurate and the other controls weights spot on. Isolation is good (those thumps that affect the ride in the front too aside, although they’re less noticeable from behind the wheel) and noise levels are really low. But there’s something about the way it steers, turns and balances its body movements that doesn’t feel natural. 

There are a lot of chassis facets and technologies at work, and while it’s impressive, and in a way that most passengers and a fair few drivers won’t really notice, you don’t quite always get back the amount of turn you asked for. It’s subtle. It’s fundamentally good, but it feels like it wants a bit more finessing. 

Given there are so many powertrain options, there are two lengths and JLR is a relatively modest size on global terms, maybe it’s understandable that the variants don’t impress equally.

If the long one doesn’t quite hit the mark, roll up the short one. It melts the doubts away within about five corners. 

I drove a P530 and then a D350. The P530’s BMW-sourced V8 is a real peach, but, like the Defender’s V8 (a different engine) does feel a bit ‘not made for the British’.  It’s lusty, smooth and alluring, but you’re probably not going to buy one, because it its First Edition specification it costs £140,420 before options and returns 275g/km of CO2. 

The D350 is more palatable, although these things are relative: it costs £108,775 in HSE form and emits 205g/km. But the Ingenium 3.0-litre straight six thrums away nicely and, paired with an understated interior, feels like the most old-school version of the new Range Rover and the most appealing: a car that would be happy to go from farm to Glyndebourne.

But it’s not just the ethos behind those two short variants that works. It’s that all of those disparate chassis technologies really feel like they meld together and bond. Whatever you put in, you get back, without delay or over-compensation or weirdness. All of the systems just hang with each other and contribute to a car that’s good. Thoroughly good. Could even be great.

That said, there was a little wind noise in one car (perhaps due to pre-production seal issues, perhaps not) and the ride would be improved again with some more sidewall on a smaller rim. Maybe it would breathe a touch more easily. But still: this is some car. 

The engineers think wind roar is noticeable because the ride and engine isolation is fundamentally so good. We will find out for sure when we get a car in the UK. But at no point do you have to go beyond a muted voice to make yourself heard to a passenger.

It’s curious really, though. I can’t remember the last time that I felt quite such a difference between variants in the same model range. And I wonder whether, if Jaguar’s new XJ limousine had been allowed to make its way to fruition, Land Rover would have decided that it didn’t need a car to ferry rear passengers quite as much as the Range Rover is being asked to.

Taking the Range Rover off-road

The ‘capability’ that they belatedly got around to? Well, I didn’t off-road much – just some steep gravel tracks with switchbacks that genuinely showed off the impressive small U-turns the car can make. 

All the other numbers are good, too. Ground clearance is 295mm (compared with 291m for the Defender and 241mm for the rival Mercedes-Benz G-Class); approach angle 34.7deg (38deg and 31deg), ramp angle 27.7deg (28deg and 26deg), departure angle 29deg (40deg and 30deg) and wading depth 900mm (900mm and 701mm). Only the PHEVs can’t pull 3500kg.

And while our off-roading was light, it felt good. It maintains the same sort of aloofness as the Defender, being happy for you to play and indulge if you want to but fundamentally capable of sorting out the off-road shenanigans by itself. You sit back and relax as you check the fencing in the far field, then come home, slip on something less comfortable and climb back in for a night in the West End.

The Mk6 Range Rover really works that way. I’m not quite so convinced of its credentials as a standalone luxury passenger-mover. Maybe JLR could have done with that new XJ after all. But in its purest form, the latest Range Rover is still the best at what it does. 

I will go with a star rating and verdict on the version of it that I think is best.

Technical specs

Model tested: Range Rover D350 HSE

Price: £108,775

Engine: 6 cyls in line, 1997cc, twin- turbo, diesel, plus 48V ISG

Transmission: 8-speed automatic

Driveline layout: Front-engine, all-wheel drive

Keyword: Land Rover Range Rover review

CAR'S NEWS RELATED

Jaguar Land Rover Is Using Old Parts To Fix 10,000 Cars Awaiting Repairs

A Range Rover Evoque owner accused Land Rover of using old parts to fix their car. Photo: Jaguar Land Rover British automaker Jaguar Land Rover has come under fire after the owner of a Range Rover Evoque accused the company of fixing her swanky SUV with used parts. The ...

View more: Jaguar Land Rover Is Using Old Parts To Fix 10,000 Cars Awaiting Repairs

Urban Automotive Brings Bespoke Range Rover & Rolls-Royce Ghost to SEMA

The team at Urban Automotive have brought their latest and greatest pair of bespoke British menaces to SEMA in Las Vegas, introducing the world to their blacked-out takes on the Rand Rover and Rolls-Royce Ghost. Urban Automotive’s showcase at SEMA is designed to show North American buyers what the British ...

View more: Urban Automotive Brings Bespoke Range Rover & Rolls-Royce Ghost to SEMA

Land Rover Defender 130 D300 First Edition (2023) Review

Could the burly, fierce, family-friendly Defender 130 be the extra-large Indiana Jones of the off-road SUV world? We drove it for a week, and now we're considering selling a kidney or two on the black market to afford one. Here's why! Few cars command as much respect on the road ...

View more: Land Rover Defender 130 D300 First Edition (2023) Review

Land Rover Defender SVX Might Be US Bound If These Spy Shots Are Accurate

Amber squares in the grille look like US-spec clearance lights for wide vehicles.

View more: Land Rover Defender SVX Might Be US Bound If These Spy Shots Are Accurate

2024 Range Rover Evoque First Drive: Just a Little More, Please

•    Auto123 gets in a first drive of the 2024 Range Rover Evoque. Paris, France – The Range Rover Evoque – the “baby” of the family, if you will – has been redesigned for 2024 in a bid to further establish Range Rover as a brand – and it is ...

View more: 2024 Range Rover Evoque First Drive: Just a Little More, Please

You Can Be Range Rover Royalty When You Buy The Queen's Chariot

Image: Iconic Auctioneers Based on condition, color, options, and mileage, Edmunds says a 2004 Range Rover is worth about six grand right now. This Epsom Green beauty has royal blood, however, as it was owned and driven by her majesty, Queen Elizabeth II. So here’s your chance to pay ...

View more: You Can Be Range Rover Royalty When You Buy The Queen's Chariot

2024 Range Rover Velar First Drive: Power, Poise, Panache

•    Auto123 gets in a first drive of the 2024 Land Rover Range Rover Velar. Paris, France – Land Rover’s Range Rover Velar is a bit of an odd duck in the lineup, sitting somewhere between the Range Rover Sport and smaller Evoque. Size-wise it’s closer to the former, but ...

View more: 2024 Range Rover Velar First Drive: Power, Poise, Panache

Queen Elizabeth's 110,000 Mile Range Rover Is Heading to Auction

Own a piece of royal automotive history.

View more: Queen Elizabeth's 110,000 Mile Range Rover Is Heading to Auction

2023 Range Rover Sport now in Malaysia at RM1.7 mil

Third-Generation Range Rover Sport Launched – RM1.7 million

Tough Mudder : Will Classic Land Rover Defender Owners welcome the new Ineos Grenadier?

Don't Take Your Land Rover LR3 Around The Nurburgring

Best-selling car from every brand in South Africa

Review: Land Rover Defender V8 Carpathian Edition

Flying Huntsman Spyder 90 Is One Weird-Looking Land Rover Defender

The 3 best new cars in South Africa right now – In 13 categories

Land Rover Adds a New Electrified Addition to the Discovery Sport Range

Custom Land Rover Defender EV Fits Inside A Superyacht

EV conversion specialist Everrati ‘launches’ Land Rover Defender designed to be stored on a yacht

New Range Rover Velar arrives in 3 variants, from RM638,800

OTHER CAR NEWS

; Top List in the World https://www.pinterest.com/newstopcar/pins/
Top Best Sushi Restaurants in SeoulTop Best Caribbean HoneymoonsTop Most Beautiful Islands in PeruTop Best Outdoor Grill BrandsTop Best Global Seafood RestaurantsTop Foods to Boost Your Immune SystemTop Best Foods to Fight HemorrhoidsTop Foods That Pack More Potassium Than a BananaTop Best Healthy Foods to Gain Weight FastTop Best Cosmetic Brands in the U.STop Best Destinations for Food Lovers in EuropeTop Best Foods High in Vitamin ATop Best Foods to Lower Your Blood SugarTop Best Things to Do in LouisianaTop Best Cities to Visit in New YorkTop Best Makeup Addresses In PennsylvaniaTop Reasons to Visit NorwayTop Most Beautiful Islands In The WorldTop Best Law Universities in the WorldTop Richest Sportsmen In The WorldTop Biggest Aquariums In The WorldTop Best Peruvian Restaurants In MiamiTop Best Road Trips From MiamiTop Best Places to Visit in MarylandTop Best Places to Visit in North CarolinaTop Best Electric Cars For KidsTop Best Swedish Brands in The USTop Best Skincare Brands in AmericaTop Best American Lipstick BrandsTop Michelin-starred Restaurants in MiamiTop Best Secluded Getaways From MiamiTop Best Things To Do On A Rainy Day In MiamiTop Most Instagrammable Places In MiamiTop Interesting Facts about FlorenceTop Facts About The First Roman Emperor - AugustusTop Best Japanese FoodsTop Most Beautiful Historical Sites in IsraelTop Best Places To Visit In Holy SeeTop Best Hawaiian IslandsTop Reasons to Visit PortugalTop Best Hotels In L.A. With Free Wi-FiTop Best Scenic Drives in MiamiTop Best Vegan Restaurants in BerlinTop Most Interesting Attractions In WalesTop Health Benefits of a Vegan DietTop Best Thai Restaurant in Las VegasTop Most Beautiful Forests in SwitzerlandTop Best Global Universities in GermanyTop Most Beautiful Lakes in GuyanaTop Best Things To Do in IdahoTop Things to Know Before Traveling to North MacedoniaTop Best German Sunglasses BrandsTop Highest Mountains In FranceTop Biggest Hydroelectric Plants in AmericaTop Best Spa Hotels in NYCTop The World's Scariest BridgeTop Largest Hotels In AmericaTop Most Famous Festivals in JordanTop Best European Restaurants in MunichTop Best Japanese Hiking Boot BrandsTop Best Universities in PolandTop Best Tips for Surfing the Web Safely and AnonymouslyTop Most Valuable Football Clubs in EuropeTop Highest Mountains In ColombiaTop Real-Life Characters of Texas RisingTop Best Beaches in GuatelamaTop Things About DR Congo You Should KnowTop Best Korean Reality & Variety ShowsTop Best RockstarsTop Most Beautiful Waterfalls in GermanyTop Best Fountain Pen Ink BrandsTop Best European Restaurants in ChicagoTop Best Fighter Jets in the WorldTop Best Three-Wheel MotorcyclesTop Most Beautiful Lakes in ManitobaTop Best Dive Sites in VenezuelaTop Best Websites For Art StudentsTop Best Japanese Instant Noodle BrandsTop Best Comedy Manhwa (Webtoons)Top Best Japanese Sunglasses BrandsTop Most Expensive Air Jordan SneakersTop Health Benefits of CucumberTop Famous Universities in SwedenTop Most Popular Films Starring Jo Jung-sukTop Interesting Facts about CougarsTop Best Hospitals for Hip Replacement in the USATop Most Expensive DefendersTop Health Benefits of GooseberriesTop Health Benefits of ParsnipsTop Best Foods and Drinks in LondonTop Health Benefits of Rosehip TeaTop Best Air Fryers for Low-fat CookingTop Most Asked Teacher Interview Questions with AnswersTop Best Shopping Malls in ZurichTop The Most Beautiful Botanical Gardens In L.A.Top Best Mexican Restaurants in Miami for Carb-loading rightTop Best Energy Companies in GermanyTop Best Garage HeatersTop Largest Banks in IrelandTop Leading Provider - Audit and Assurance In The USTop Best Jewelry Brands in IndiaTop Prettiest Streets in the UKTop Best Lakes to Visit in TunisiaTop Highest Mountains in Israel