Range Rover Sport 2010 Range Rover Sport TDV6 / 5.0 V8 – First Drives (CarMagazine, Autocar, …)


The Land Rover Range Rover Sport, generally known as the Range Rover Sport, is a mid-size luxury SUV produced by Land Rover, later Jaguar Land Rover. The first generation (codename: L320) started production in 2005, and was replaced by the second generation Range Rover Sport (codename: L494) in 2013, which was replaced by the third generation Range Rover Sport (codename: L461) in 2022.

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Kraftwagen König
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Land Rover has revised its most road-focussed SUV ever, the Range Rover Sport. There’s now new petrol and diesel engines (shared with the new Discovery 4, XF and XJ), a thoroughly revised interior, and a more modern exterior to match the look of the recently facelifted Range Rover proper. Read on to find out exactly how the new £50,695 2010 Range Rover Sport TDV6 drives.

And if I cough up £50,695 for a new Range Rover Sport what exactly do I get?

Quite a lot in HSE spec. There’s climate control, cruise control, bi-xenon lights, 20-inch wheels, metallic paint, parking sensors and a rear-view camera, keyless entry and start, leather seats (deep breath), plus sat-nav and a nine-speaker Harman/Kardon audio system, DAB tuner, MP3 connection and Bluetooth.

That’s not to mention all the off-road gear, which includes air suspension, a low-ratio ‘box, hill descent control and Land Rover’s Terrain Response dial that lets you tweak all the electronic controls to suit the, err, terrain. So forget shifting levers like you do in a Defender – instead you press a button or twist a dial and the Range Sport will clamber up, over or through pretty much any landscape you put in front of it. And all on 20-inch road rubber.

Talk me though these exterior tweaks.

Land Rover is giving the Range Rover family a new hierarchy, so the original Rangie has a three-bar front grille, three bars in the side vents side and triple-strake front and rear indicators. The Sport has two of each of these, which leads you to presume the forthcoming LRX must make do with just one…

The lights are now LEDs front and rear, with a smoked-effect finish at the back and a subtle circle of daytime running lights on the nose. There’s also a new front bumper, new exhausts, and although the tweaks sound fairly restrained, they all combine to make the 2010 Range Sport look lower and sleeker.…


Range Rover Sport TDV6 (2010) CAR review | Road Testing Reviews | Car Magazine Online
 
Autocar - First Drive: Range Rover Sport 3.0 TDV6 HSE



Range Rover Sport 3.0 TDV6 HSE

What is it?

Like its Discovery sister car, the 2010 Range Rover Sport gets a major makeover. The interior has been completely re-designed (with a big step-up in perceived quality) as has the front-end. The chassis has also been substantially re-worked.

The most significant change is under the bonnet with the introduction of the new 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 diesel, which offers 29 percent more power and 36 percent more torque than the outgoing 2.7-litre unit.

The overall aim, Land Rover says, is to make the car ‘More sporty and more sophisticated’. Aside from some of the more crass stylistic details, the company has achieved its aim.…

Range Rover Sport 3.0 TDV6 HSE - Road Test First Drive - Autocar.co.uk





 
Wow, I love that interior. Always loved the range rover but the weakest point is the rear.
 
Well...I am BMW fan + SAV fan....

I love Landy's:t-cheers: AND the Sport looks great in an out!
 
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Range Rover Sport 5.0 Supercharged CAR review

If you’re a regular CAR Online visitor, you may already have read Ben Pulman’s report on the newly revised Range Rover Sport TDV6. So I’ll keep the news about the Sport’s general upgrades brief and concentrate on the headline news about this model: its new 5.0-litre supercharged V8. Thought that might prick up your ears.
Does this new supercharged Range Rover Sport have the engine from the XFR?

Yes, it’s pretty much what powers the Jaguar XFR to such great effect, and it deploys the same 503bhp here too. But, as you might expect, it’s been optimised somewhat for this 4x4 application, with a deeper sump guard, thorough water-proofing and a torque curve to suit some hefty off-roading.

You can tell it apart from the old car by the revised two-bar grille, slimmer headlamps and new bumpers. Get inside and you’ll spot the new dash and doortrims. And if you’re still in doubt, give that right pedal a shove.
Quick then, is it?

You could say that. Think in terms of swift (really swift) estate cars and it’s mighty impressive. For a car that weighs 2.6 tonnes it’s nigh-on phenomenal, with visceral urge accompanied by a refined growl from under the bonnet. But only four stars? Well, to be honest, I thought it might be quicker still, but it’s given all its best by 5000rpm, after which the thrust tails off and the snarl gives way to the heavy-breathing supercharger. It’s also a little hesitant from standstill, as though the torque convertor has to spool up before slinging you down the road.

But most of the time you’re spoiled with more pace than you’ll ever need and, if used in ‘sport’ mode, the auto-box usually lands in the right ratio and is swift to kickdown. Want more control? Treat yourself to the paddleshift for a gratifyingly immediate response, but beware: it’ll expect you to carry on with the work, and won’t shift up for you at the red line.…

Range Rover Sport 5.0 Supercharged CAR review | Road Testing Reviews | Car Magazine Online

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CarEnthusiast - First Drive: Land Rover Sport 5.0 SC

And another one. Like this car, but would prefer his big brother though…

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First Drive | Roxburghshire, Scotland | 2010 Range Rover Sport |

The Range Rover Sport instantly became the poster boy for evil SUV profligacy when it was unveiled as the production version of 2004's Range Stormer concept in 2005. Even Greenpeace had a proper pop at it when a factory protest delayed production.

Since then the Porsche Cayenne, Audi Q7 and BMW X6 have come along to deflect attention away from Land Rover's bad boy, so, as though upset that it's been usurped, Land Rover has endowed the Sport with the supercharged 5.0-litre V8 from the Jaguar XFR, good for 503bhp. Put that in your bean broth.

(By the way, it's better on fuel and has lower emissions that the old petrol model, but that detracts from the point, so let's leave that for now and move on...)

In the Metal

Alongside the Range Rover and the new Discovery, the Sport is one of a trio of Land Rovers to get a proper update for the 2010 model year, bringing the three luxury cars in the maker's five-model line-up together with a more coherent look. The Range Rover Sport probably gets the subtlest exterior revisions of the three, but as with the Disco put this new one alongside the old and you'll see that the changes are effective in making the car look altogether neater. The headlamps are narrower and the light clusters redesigned, and much of the pre-facelift car's front detailing is removed in favour of clearer surfaces.

Inside, however, the transformation is as stark as that of the new Discovery. According to Land Rover, the most common criticism among current Sport owners is that much of the interior feels cheap compared to the Range Rover. Well, that problem is eradicated now, because the Sport has adopted a cabin almost identical to the new Discovery's, and thus two leagues ahead of the outgoing car's. The plastics are soft and well glued together, the leather dash top looks great and the ambience is of uncluttered luxury. Facelifts that drag a car this far above the original are rare. That said, the dash fascia of one of the cars we drove occasionally creaked like an old French car. Odd.

What you get for your Money

The Sport has been moved upmarket, so it gets leather for the seats and dash as standard, a six-speed ZF auto 'box, dual-zone climate control and technology including the new Jaguar touch screen infotainment interface, an LCD information display between the tacho and speedo, and, of course, the new iteration of Land Rover's Terrain Response system - with a new 'dynamic' setting for the supercharged version.

Which brings us to the engines. We drove the 5.0-litre supercharged model and the 3.0-litre twin-turbo diesel, both from the Jaguar stable, and both offering improved performance, emissions and consumption over their outgoing equivalents. The TDV8 diesel remains, but seems superfluous next to the new V6 diesel.

Driving it

Is like being transported into a world where the nuisance of monthly cash flow is inconsequential. But don't be fooled - the Range Rover Sport is a hugely capable machine, with a breadth of abilities far, far greater than it will ever be called to use by 99 percent of owners.

First the supercharged version, whose stats give it a genuine claim as a proper performance car: it's 1.2-seconds quicker to 60mph than the 4.2-litre model of old, and about five percent more efficient. The Sport weighs 2.5 tonnes, but the 5.0-litre makes light work of propelling it along with calm brutality. It's quick, but its speed comes with effortless tranquillity.

The diesel TDV6 is the same as it only loses 18lb.ft of torque to the 5.0-litre petrol engine, so it's only marginally less capable of pushing the Sport's brick-like body along with vigour. It's quiet too, and although it suffers the same delayed throttle response as the Discovery, it has all the torque you'll need - which is just as well, because, of course, it will account for the vast majority of cars sold.

Not that it matters too much, but the Sport is a surprisingly composed and agile block of steel to throw around corners. The suspension and chassis have been given an overhaul to improve on-road manners, and the car deals with that old ride/handling balance with far greater prowess than a big SUV should. It's firmer than the Discovery, bringing road lumps to your attention with more clarity, but it's never crashy and resists body roll very well indeed; it tackles high-speed corners with plenty more stability than you might expect.

Selecting the 'dynamic' programme on the Terrain Response dial tightens up the damping even further and re-maps the software for the active anti-roll bars, giving the car even tighter body control from turn to turn. The variable steering rack is a little light for our tastes and lacks feel, obviously, but it's direct enough, and the brakes, thankfully, grind all 2.5 tonnes of SUV to a halt quickly and without any fuss. None of this comes at the expense of off-road ability, which is exemplary.

Worth Noting

Land Rover design boss Gerry McGovern (who, despite his name, doesn't wear cowboy boots and a massive hat) mentioned how keen the company is to get the LRX coupé-crossover to market, saying he hoped to have something concrete"by next year". A later chat with an insider at Land Rover revealed that the company is in the final stages of getting the sleek three-door concept to production, and that the priority is making the showroom version as close as possible to the concept. It looks like it will be pitched close to the BMW X1 in terms of price and performance, but Land Rover will aim to make the LRX far more stylish than the Beemer, using it to drag customers "away from 3 Series Coupés" and the like. Rumour has it the 'baby Rangie' will be built in Halewood in Liverpool, too. Watch this space.

Summary

Whatever the engine, the Range Rover Sport is quick, refined, quiet, comfortable, spacious, well-equipped and pretty handy across fields and things. In short, it isn't cheap, but it's all the hatchback you'll ever want or need - in Supercharged and V6 turbodiesel guises respectively.

Car reviews | Land Rover Range Rover Sport | Sport silly | by Car Enthusiast

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I just love Land Rovers......they're products are so unique, so very British. Come to think of it they're the only British SUV maker in the U.S. Period. Just look at those interiors. Their only caveat is their reliability.


M
 
Land Rover's aren't reliable? My father, a former car dealership owner, always said they were one of the best.:t-hands:

By the way, can anyone give me a quick history lineage on the RR Sport facelifts?
 
I am so disappointed that Land Rover South Africa are not bringing the new TDV6 here, only the TDV8. I've driven the TDV8 and i has bad turbo lag. They will force me into a BMW X5 35d when I change my next car :-(
 
LLN - 2010 Range Rover Sport [Review]














The Range Rover Sport has been a popular model for Land Rover since it debuted in 2005 as a 2006 model, but the British automaker’s first attempt at a sporting ‘ute was by no means an out-of-the-ballpark home run. Customers complained about the Range Rover Sport’s sub-par interior materials and lackluster powertrains – even in Supercharged-guise – but Land Rover has all but solved those issues with the Sport’s 2010 refresh.

Like the 2010 Land Rover LR4 and Range Rover models, the 2010 Range Rover Sport isn’t all-new for this model year, but the Sport’s mid-cycle updated makes it seem miles apart from the outgoing model. Almost every aspect of the Range Rover Sport has been redone for the 2010 model year, resulting in a high-performance SUV that is just at home on a winding back road as it is on a two-track mountain pass.

Old but new
At first glance, you’d be hard pressed to notice any differences between the outgoing 2009 Sport and the new 2010 model. However, look closer and you’ll notice subtle differences that give the 2010 model a slightly more aggressive look.

Up front, the Range Rover Sport’s bumper has been completely redesigned, reducing the previous design’s bulky look. Fog lights have been moved lower and wider, with the bumper’s sculpted edges giving the Range Rover Sport a more planted look. New for 2010 is a two-bar grille, replacing the last-generation’s three-bar unit. That two-bar treatment is carried over to the Sport’s new headlight units – take a closer look at the turning indicators – which feature Land Rover’s new signature LED treatment.

The sides of the Range Rover Sport remain largely the same – save for revised fender vents – with the rear of the truck featuring a new bumper design and new taillights with the two-bar theme.

While the Range Rover Sport’s interior design isn’t radically new for 2010, it features a heavily revised center stack and much improved materials. Gone is the sea of black plastics and buttons, replaced with a design more in line with the Range Rover name. Like the LR4, most of the Sport’s buttons have moved to the dash mounted screen, resulting in an overall cleaner look. Interior material quality is now top-notch, with not a single bit of hard plastic in sight. Real wood accents lend a dose of luxury.

Putting the sport back in Range Rover Sport
The Range Rover Sport has sport right in its name, so it better deliver with performance. The previous Range Rover Sport fell short on that promise, but a new range of powertrains and a revised suspension ensures the 2010 version doesn’t disappoint.

The base model Range Rover Sport now comes equipped with a 5.0-liter direct-injection V8 hooked to a revised six-speed automatic transmission. Rated at 375 horsepower and 375 lb-ft. of torque, the 2010 Range Rover Sport is actually just as fast as the previous-generation Range Rover Sport Supercharged was, with a 0-60 time of just over 7 seconds. That extra power is easily felt through a seat-of-your-pants test, with the 5.0-liter model providing enough oomph for all but the most power-crazed buyers.

On road handling is surprising good on the Range Rover Sport, especially considering its off-road prowess. The Sport’s ride is undeniably of the firm side, but nothing worse than you’d find in a luxury sports sedan. Grip is more than plentiful with body roll never becoming an issue.

However, if you have gasoline pumping through your veins – and an extra $14,000 burning a hole in your pocket – you’ll definitely want to opt for the Supercharged model. Using the same supercharged V8 engine found in the engine bay of the Jaguar XKR, the Range Rover Sport Supercharged belts out 510 horsepower and 461 lb-ft. of torque. Land Rover says the Sport Supercharged can hit 60 from a standstill in 5.9 seconds and that figure felt conservative to us. The Supercharged model flat-out flies.

Luckily, the Supercharged model also includes Land Rovers new Dynamic Response and Adaptive Dynamics suspension technology to keep you on your intended path. Activated by a switch on the center console – appropriately marked by two squiggly tire marks — Land Rover’s suspension systems monitor each wheel 500 times a second, adjusting damping and suspension setting as necessary. The result is a hulk of a beast that handles eerily well – the Range Rover Sport Supercharged exhibits virtually zero body lean with grip only limited by the road surface. Standard 20-inch wheels hide upgraded Brembo brakes, which really help when the road runs out.

Aiding the Sport’s sporty demeanor is a smart transmission that can “learn” your driving style. By the end of our jaunt in the Sport, it was holding gears longer and downshifting aggressively during hard braking. Paddle shifters are part of the Supercharged package, but the sport function of the transmission is so good that they aren’t even necessary.

Leftlane’s bottom line
With a heavily revised interior and a powertrain selection worthy of its nameplate, the 2010 Range Rover Sport is not only a viable option in the performance luxury SUV segment, it’s one of the best in the business. The base model is great on its own, with the Supercharged model transforming the ‘ute into a world-beater. If you can swallow the Sport’s upper five-digit price tag, there is nothing that can come close to its combination of luxury, sport and off-road performance.

2010 Land Rover Range Rover Sport base price, $60,495.
2010 Land Rover Range Rover Sport Supercharged base price, $74,195.



http://www.leftlanenews/range-rover-sport-first-drive-review.html



M
 

Jaguar Land Rover

Jaguar Land Rover Automotive PLC is the holding company for Jaguar Land Rover Limited, also known as JLR, a British multinational manufacturer of luxury and sports utility vehicles. JLR, headquartered in Whitley, Coventry, UK, is a subsidiary of Tata Motors. Jaguar and Land Rover, with histories dating to the 1920s and 1940s, merged in 1968 under British Leyland. They later became independent and were subsidiaries of BMW and Ford. In 2000, BMW dissolved the Rover Group, selling Land Rover to Ford. Since 2008, Tata Motors has owned Jaguar Land Rover.
Official website: JLR

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