I thought they were going to launch the 4 cylinder ones this year too?
They will do, just as soon as they've had time to blank off two cylinders from the batch of V6s they've built.
I thought they were going to launch the 4 cylinder ones this year too?
They will do, just as soon as they've had time to blank off two cylinders from the batch of V6s they've built.
Jaguar today confirmed that it's slotting one of its four-cylinder Ingenium engines into the F-Type, offering not only improved fuel economy and lower cost of entry, but a lighter package with better balance as well.
2.0-liter turbo four good for 296 horsepower and 295 lb-ft of torque.
Coupled exclusively (for the time being at least) to an eight-speed automatic transmission and rear-wheel drive, the four-cylinder F-Type is quoted to crack 60 miles per hour from a standstill in 5.4 seconds and top out at 155(249km/h).
Those performance figures are pretty impressive for such a small engine, and it's said to return 39.2 miles per gallon(9.2l per 100km) on the European cycle
The four-cylinder model is over 114lbs(52kg) lighter than the V6 model
priced in the UK from £49,900(58.808€)
Fair game to JLR. They are using the 296hp 4 pot to make the F-Type more affordable for TT/Z4/SLC customers. It's the same engine that will make the entry-level Velar a bigger threat to the Germans than the Range Rover Sport was.
VW have offered "low power" base engines for decades and it has helped them meet budget conscious customers halfway and grow production numbers.
The roadster segment isn't exactly a fast rising one. I therefore don't blame JLR for taking action in preventing F-Type sales from shrinking to minuscule numbers.
Jaguar was probably too optimistic, thinking people are willing to pay the unrealistic asking price for the styling alone. I still see a few of them around though.At my local JLR dealer, my friend who is sales associate candidly told me that some dealerships nationwide secretly wish the F-Type hadn't gone on sale because sales have been dead. The fundamental probelem is it's SLC/Boxster sized, but SL priced. Maybe the Turbo 4 will alleviate the problem.
Some dealships still have unsold MY2015, which means it's been sitting for 3 years
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Not surprised, the only way to make this work is to follow Porsche's way, and have a lot of component sharing between the Boxter/Cayman and the 911.I predict the small luxury sports car segment will slowly disappear within the next decade.
Jaguar was probably too optimistic, thinking people are willing to pay the unrealistic asking price for the styling alone. I still see a few of them around though.
Not surprised, the only way to make this work is to follow Porsche's way, and have a lot of component sharing between the Boxter/Cayman and the 911.
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