XJ Official: 2010 Jaguar XJ (X351)


The Jaguar XJ is a series of mid-size/full-size luxury cars produced from 1968 to 2019. It was produced across four basic platform generations (debuting in 1968, 1986, 2003, and 2009) with various updated derivatives of each. From 1970, it was Jaguar's flagship four-door model. The original model was the last Jaguar saloon to have been designed under the leadership of Sir William Lyons, the company's founder, and the model has been featured in countless media and high-profile appearances.
The Brits are known for being rather nationalistic in their view of the auto industry favoring domestic products over all other available alternatives from competing manufactures of other origin. This blind patriotism seems to be deeply ingrained in Brit automotive journalism and its rather unfortunate as it undermines the credibility of their writing.

The auto industry is the pinnacle of industrialisation. From manufacturing to reaching customers and even after-sales, it employ a colossal number of people. I don't think there isn't any nation that isn't blindly proud of their car manufacturers. In Sweden Volvo's pretty much get top rating/score in every test while BMW, Mercedes and Audi cars get play down for high costs and big engines.
 
The rear is soo french.:t-banghea

Love the front and profile though.:D

Hey! What's wrong with France and french car design?
Things have changed (recently)!
Le Quement is not in charge of RENAULT anymore and PEUGEOT CITROËN is churning out REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY REALLY nice looking car this days...:D....I mean, they do look good when compared to direct competitors...:D...

The unpainted C pillar looks like a desperate try at making the rear end look different.
It's cheap and somehow make the car look fragile.
I cannot wait to read Clarksson's test of this car who will no doubt be yet another flamboyant ode at Jaguar revival.
 
I'm surprised so many people like it. It doesn't look British at all..

Well, every british car will look better then the new Bentley…if it is british looking or not. Most beautiful XJ was the last series (X350) before the facelift though…but it's great to see that they designed sth new. The old design didn't sell well…so maybe this will! :eusa_danc
 
When I saw the front & profile... I thought finally there is a Jag, I might think to put my money on! :usa7uh:

However, after looking at the rare-end, I calmed myself by whispering... stick to the Germans! :t-cheers:
 
Wow, I like all aspects of this car...front, side, and back. I like how the rear is unadorned, simple, and austere. However, the black C-pillar does seem like an afterthought. I do hope that there's an option to make it body-colored, but even if there is an option like that, those 2 joints would ruin any chance of fluidity. I do see the similarities of the rear to the Lancia Thesis. While the overall design of the Thesis is pretty jumbled design, especially, its front, the rear I thought was elegant, and, at the time, futuristic...it just didn't mesh with the rest of the car. I give the XJ's overall exterior 8.3/10. By the way, I was hoping for at least 9.5/10, so color me a bit disappointed. Once the interior is shown, then I'll have the ranking figured out. From an exterior standpoin, I still do think that this will give the Germans a run for their money. It is quite a lithe and elegant car with it's weird little idiosyncrasy.

Also, it's not the british journos who are raving about the XFR, the americans are as well. After seeing the XFR in person, I can see what all the fuss is about. That car, and the XF in general, seem to be a bit more "special" when compared to the Germans. Even though I do love the big trimuvirate Germans, the XFR seems to be the best compromise of size, power, handling, utility, and comfort. The only issue I'd have with the XF/XFR is the touch-screen interface. The German publications are also somewhat guilty of fawning over their own countrymen's products as anybody else. It's natural to take pride in what your country works hard to build and produce. It seems that Americans (along with a good chunk of the world) are more merciless with their own auto products.

Just my observation.
 
was looking forward too see this and i'm not dissapointed.

I'm glad that jag are not scared to experiment, i like some of the touches they have tried but they've not been executed as well as they could have, But overall i'm really happy. I could see this competing with the germans and giving them a run for their money. Well done JAG :D
 
Lol call me crazy but i like all 3 of these

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Wow, I like all aspects of this car...front, side, and back. I like how the rear is unadorned, simple, and austere. However, the black C-pillar does seem like an afterthought. I do hope that there's an option to make it body-colored, but even if there is an option like that, those 2 joints would ruin any chance of fluidity. I do see the similarities of the rear to the Lancia Thesis. While the overall design of the Thesis is pretty jumbled design, especially, its front, the rear I thought was elegant, and, at the time, futuristic...it just didn't mesh with the rest of the car. I give the XJ's overall exterior 8.3/10. By the way, I was hoping for at least 9.5/10, so color me a bit disappointed. Once the interior is shown, then I'll have the ranking figured out. From an exterior standpoin, I still do think that this will give the Germans a run for their money. It is quite a lithe and elegant car with it's weird little idiosyncrasy.

Also, it's not the british journos who are raving about the XFR, the americans are as well. After seeing the XFR in person, I can see what all the fuss is about. That car, and the XF in general, seem to be a bit more "special" when compared to the Germans. Even though I do love the big trimuvirate Germans, the XFR seems to be the best compromise of size, power, handling, utility, and comfort. The only issue I'd have with the XF/XFR is the touch-screen interface. The German publications are also somewhat guilty of fawning over their own countrymen's products as anybody else. It's natural to take pride in what your country works hard to build and produce. It seems that Americans (along with a good chunk of the world) are more merciless with their own auto products.

Just my observation.

Agreed about the XF. Leader in its class right now IMO, definitely above the W212 in sex appeal and style/design, and leaps ahead of the current 5'er. Interior is very nice as well, although some of the fussy/attention to detail stuff is a bit behind M-B.

I don't know what to think of this new Jag. It is a truly bold statement though. I see a bit of BMW in the design, namely the front/side profile.
 
The S class will NEVER meet its match..
Not even this one has yet..and its shit old:D

Its probably better than the new 7er and the XJ:D

108f63a9806c56441d2b7c2f4dd0519c.webp


The S-class met its most notable match in 1987:



The BMW 750il was the very reason why Mercedes introduced the S600 in 1991.

I did NOT want to say this, but the S-class, 7-Series and XJ almost saw their kingdom fall apart, after the car in the below picture emerged in the market 20 years ago:

63d9713b09c4984e85609d3c8ff2dcda.webp


The Lexus LS400 was a big wake-up call for BMW, Mercedes and Jaguar.

Audi wasn't a serious player yet, until the arrival of the A8 in 1994.
 
Love it! Very fresh and new! Front is perfect, side is excellent, and the rear looks innovative and clean.

The blacked-out C-pillar makes perfect sense (enlarge the rear, give a mysterious appearance), what I don't get is the painted strip above the rear window.

They should've make the whole roof black, so as to have a single arch from bonnet to boot. With blackened A and C-pillar, could've looked quite stunning actually!!
Only the chrome surrounding standing out, delicate, from the glossy black top half of the car.
 
The S-class met its most notable match in 1987:



The BMW 750il was the very reason why Mercedes introduced the S600 in 1991.

I did NOT want to say this, but the S-class, 7-Series and XJ almost saw their kingdom fall apart, after the car in the below picture emerged in the market 20 years ago:

63d9713b09c4984e85609d3c8ff2dcda.webp


The Lexus LS400 was a big wake-up call for BMW, Mercedes and Jaguar.

Audi wasn't a serious player yet, until the arrival of the A8 in 1994.

The 50i was a quite poor motor. Weak torque. Outclassed by the V8 500 of the Mercedes. It only did shock the world because it was a V12, it did shock Mercedes that was recovering from seeing BMW creating a credible luxo-barge. But the 750iL was really no match for the 500/560 SEL. No match at all.

The LS400 was a bigger threat. It was only hardly inferior, but did that at half the price with double the equipment. It was an amazing car, with unmatched value for the price. You almost got an S-Class, but for half its price... However, it was little more than a reverse-engineered W140... Which doesn't make its achievment smaller: stunning first try at a luxury vehicle!


But IMO, the only time when the S-Class was really threatened, is when the e65 came out. Okay, was porky, okay, was dead-unreliable, okay was complex to use, okay was finished as a Dacia.

But step in a W220, and after that in an e65, and you jump two generations. The interior design, and iDrive, made this car a revolution.
Much more than the ugly exterior, in fact, that proved its ugliness and total unability to stand the test of time.

The S-Class, vastly superior car as a whole than the unfinished BMW, was threatened because it was totally outfashioned by the 7er. It caught Mercedes off-guard, and was unheard of. That really did threaten the S-Class and scare the hell out of Mercedes-Benz!
 
True the W140 S500's V8 did match the V12 in the 1988 750iL, but the 560SEL's SOHC V8 was no match for the V12 in the new BMW. The W140 S500 (and its DOHC, 32V V8) didn't come along until 1992, which meant that it was a good 4 years at which the BMW sat the head of this class in my book.

The LS400 used to beat up on the 420SEL all the time, but in the few times it was compared to the 560SEL it lost.


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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