Range Rover Sport Range Rover Sport (L494)

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.
Autocar reviews the Range Rover Sport SDV6:

Here: http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-review...sdv6-autobiography-dynamic-first-drive-review

The words:

Autocar said:
What is it?

The diesel version of the new Range Rover Sport we’ve already heavily sampled in its 5.0-litre Supercharged spec. Where most of those cars will be destined for the Persian Gulf and North America, the 288bhp SDV6, with 199g/km CO2 emissions and 37.7mpg potential, is the variant you can expect to see on a driveway near you sometime soon.
There will be an entry-level model beneath it — with 254bhp and precisely the same peak twist — but that will only be available in lowly SE trim. The SDV6 comes in the more desirable HSE, HSE Dynamic and Autobiography Dynamic clothes. Adding the word Dynamic to your car is important too, as it delivers the adaptive anti-roll bar and dampers which make the Sport a better overall prospect.
As standard, this is the first car Land Rover has offered with a single-speed transfer case. Said to be 18kg lighter, the new system uses a Torsen centre differential to deploy a default 42/58 per cent front-to-rear torque split. It will send as much as 78 per cent to the rear and 62 per cent to the front; if you want to go beyond that, you’ll need the optional two-speed transfer box.
The multi-plate clutch in its centre differential defaults to a 50/50 spread, but is capable of increasing that to 100 per cent on each axle if the conditions insist upon it. It also offers selectable low range and all the advantages that come with it. Clearly this is the more off-road capable option (it’s the one tested here), and by making it an extra, Land Rover has set out its stall - the Sport is an on-road machine first and foremost.

What is it like?

In Autobiography spec, stellar. If the ’charger is the cherry on top of Land Rover’s new cake - glossy, super-sweet, slightly superfluous - the V6 is the icing, sponge and cream actually intended to sate the craving. There will be a TDV8 above it by next year, but it’s hard to see where the capability gaps are for it to plug, so congenial, lean and seemly is the performance meted out here.
There’s a tendency in the petrol V8 model to value only one facet of the new Sport - it’s ability to carry and accommodate huge and unlikely speed. Everything else fades into the background of its combustible snarl and that colossal lick. In the diesel, the car feels more three dimensional; better capable of muffling tedious miles and making quiet, expedient progress around town.
Which isn’t to say that the SDV6 is slow: 0-60mph is accomplished in 6.8 seconds - plenty fast enough for a two-tonne car with two full metres of girth - and there’s a fat, 442lb ft seam of torque to endlessly exploit. But it doesn’t careen out of the gate like the V8 so there’s less temptation to bully it all the time; instead what you get is a swift, seamless pull away under a half throttle - precisely the amount of acceleration most of us use in the course of an average day.
It follows this up with impeccable manners. Obviously the petrol-engined car (and its exhaust) is tuned to remind you what you’ve forked out for, and the diesel is deliberately more inconspicuous, although so crafty is JLR’s tweaking that it’s possible to draw almost as much satisfaction from its insulated hum at cruise and the heavy throb that accompanies rising revs. As with most eight-speed gearboxes, the transmission is predisposed to downshifting at the slightest provocation, but the utterly superb ZF unit makes these blips almost unnoticeable.
The Sport will happily dispense bigger speeds in its default mode, but the Dynamic setting does the familiar business of altering the steering, gearbox, throttle and suspension settings. This inevitably makes the car’s already slightly more abrasive ride (compared to a Range Rover) that bit stiffer but it also allows its new dynamic character, warm and fluid before, to unmistakably set.
Aided by torque vectoring at the front and the (optional) rear diff, the Sport will now turn in on its standard mud and snow tyres with squealing conviction, and then shift merrily sideways for a moment as drive is biased towards the rear axle. In the V8 this occurs ridiculously early in the engine’s repertoire; in the V6, it feels encouragingly like you are testing and harnessing both in some kind of harmony.

Should I buy one?

Absolutely. The new Sport, from a keen driver’s point of view, might just be the best SUV in the world at the moment, and the SDV6 is just the engine to enjoy (and abuse) all of its brilliance. No, it isn’t anywhere near as mighty as the Cayenne’s new diesel V8, and some might justifiably prefer the superior presence of the not-much-more expensive TDV6 full-size Range Rover Vogue SE, but neither of those cars has quite the same breadth of talent.
Smooth and soundless on the motorway, high and mighty in traffic, inevitably brilliant off-road; and now a genuinely entertaining steer when the mood takes you - the Sport (with all its option boxes ticked) has a wonderful capacity for rising to any occasion. Unless the less powerful and cheaper TDV6 - with its passive systems and single transfer box proves otherwise, the SDV6 is where we’d save up to put all our money.
Range Rover Sport 3.0-litre SDV6 Autobiography Dynamic
Price £74,995 ; 0-60mph 6.8 sec; Top speed 138mph; CO2 199g/km;Economy 37.7mpg; Kerb weight 2115kg; Engine longitudinal V6, 24v, 2993cc; Power 292bhp at 400rpm; Torque 442lb/ft at 2000rpm;Gearbox 8-speed automatic
 
She needs a semi trailer.

It was interesting to read that everything that family promotes ends up failing commercially ,
I went to a social media conference in California where Kim was a speaker as soon as the Narcissism commenced about using Instagram , Facebook , twitter etc all your big companies including myself left the conference room and headed to the free bar. so hopefully their 15 minutes is coming to an end. They all have new Range Rovers but it is interesting to know that Land Rover America tweeted that they are not product placement.

Hopefully the dumbing down of America will end and people will actually want to be engineers and scientists again instead of reality TV famewhores.
 
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Some here hate these, and Mercedes and like might make a far more reliable vehicle, but the design of this vehicle trumps them all, inside and out. Stunning.



http://www.carenthusiast.com/reviews/article/8469/-/2013-Land Rover-Range Rover Sport/First drive - SDV6 Autobiography Dynamic.html


M
 
Man oh man... I want one of these! Looks terrific inside and out.
 
stunning.

is that what they do to the muppets who think this real weight 2.5 tonnes, world's most unreliable, £75k, slower than a base X5 diesel, thirstier than an Irishman on St Patrick's night, aimed cynially at WAGs, crap overpaid English footballers heap is good - stun them? - or do they just wait for Clarkson to do his JLR advert for it on Top Gear to sell them?

Now if I was an airhead wag, or an up and coming drug dealer in any English wrecked town, or a 19 yr old Prem. footballer on £50k a week but unable to beat a by war destroyed Iraq team playing just for the love of their country, I'd be holding out for this gorgeous £200k baby!:

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Such naff crap vehicles appeal to such naff crap people.
 
Again, Kilcrohane, so you do NOT like the stuff that's being put out by JLR?

Because the amount you talk and obsess about them, methinks you have a bit of a crush on them, quite like a young lad has on a pretty gal. I am starting to find your rants cute. :love:
 
Again, Kilcrohane, so you do NOT like the stuff that's being put out by JLR?

I admit, I genuinely can't get over how anyone with two brain cells to rub together, so anyone other than Victoria Beckham, David Beckham, the Kardashians, Prem footballers and their WAGs, see anything other than utter naffness in these heaps.

I guess it's the power of PR - Edward Bernaysian developed level PR, i.e. propaganda and brainwashing.

Stick some muppet footballer in a Range Rover or a Hollywood 'celebrity A-lister' and half the world goes ga-ga. Add the power of Clarkson's Top Gear barely-disguised adverts and bingo you have a runaway success of what is mind-boggling awfulness.

I swear the likes of Madison Avenue, the WPPs of this world, challenge themselves to see just what level of shit they can peddle to the masses and still get them to literally swallow it. It's like grown men and women drinking coca-cola. There's no explanation for it other than the power of advertising, the dumbing down and treating people like sugar-craving impulsive children.

The trouble with this approach to flogging shit, though, is that eventually even the most cretinous realise that the stuff they thought was great was and is in fact shit.
 
I admit, I genuinely can't get over how anyone with two brain cells to rub together, so anyone other than Victoria Beckham, David Beckham, the Kardashians, Prem footballers and their WAGs, see anything other than utter naffness in these heaps.

Yes. We get it. Nobody is saying you're not entitled to your opinion. Some may even agree with you. But change the record for God's sake! You obviously have some good knowledge and come across as intelligent. If you take out 90% of the hyperbole from your posts people who don't currently read your posts will read them, myself included. You could turn out to be one of the most valuable contributors to the forum....far more useful contributions than me.

Just some friendly advice. Do with it what you will.
 
Yes. We get it. Nobody is saying you're not entitled to your opinion. Some may even agree with you. But change the record for God's sake! You obviously have some good knowledge and come across as intelligent. If you take out 90% of the hyperbole from your posts people who don't currently read your posts will read them, myself included. You could turn out to be one of the most valuable contributors to the forum....far more useful contributions than me.

Just some friendly advice. Do with it what you will.

Don't tell him how to behave. We don't have to fit your profile.

I like the way he writes. Keep it up! Spice things up!
 
You can comment and criticize the JLR for all you want, we are fine with that but we do not approve stereotyping the owners of these vehicles. People can do whatever they want with their money, it is their choice. In addition, people on this forum are free to like whatever car they want, you just have to accept it.
 
The crazy thing is: taking all of Kilcrohane's misgivings (isn't that such a diplomatic way of putting it? :D ) into account as to why he has this powerful contempt for all things JLR (their lack of in-house tech, their inability to investovate - hey cool, I just invented a new internet word - their fudging of the weight figures and so on) and I'm still not un-sold on the RR Sport SDV6! I like the fact that it uses a lighter (but not as light as they claim) all aluminium body, it's got the best gearbox in the world in it - the ZF 8 speed - and brilliant, reliable, compliant, PSA-base-technology, diesel engines.

It CAN do this:

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Something you'll NEVER see an X5 or Q7 or Cayenne do (though you can get it in the vital-statistically endowed Touareg). I dig the ML, I dig the Touareg, but I really want a new RR Sport. Does that make me some kind of a dupe?
 
martinbo said: ↑
Does that make me some kind of a dupe?

I guess am I dupe as well as a current (repeat buyer of the) full size RR owner. I plan to replace my "11 with the new sport. I'll be damned to let Kilcrohane's banter dissuade me from not buying another Rover especially sense I haven't had any reliability issues after 100K+ miles.
 
It CAN do this:

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Something you'll NEVER see an X5 or Q7 or Cayenne do

Oh come on. What exactly is the above heap 'doing' that any other car does/cannot do? Go up a dirt road with a modest incline in July in England? Wow! Where's my cheque book.

How hackneyed is this 'the best 4x4xfar' off-roading thing anyway? A Lada Niva or a Dacia Duster would do the above, probably without going into 'Check Engine' limp-home mode or worse. A FWD Fiesta would probably get up that track. What exactly is it 'doing' that gives you the hots? Wouldn't it be cheaper to just buy a large white unreliable car, splatter some mud on the side of it, and buy yourself some Hunter wellington boots, if you want to act all Lord of the Manor-ish?

If you want to go clambering around moderately inclined, moderately moist green lanes in what passes for the English summer, I suggest you buy yourself a front-wheel drive Toyota Yaris, a waterproof from Millets, and join in with all the other doggers, as these are the only people these days frequenting woods regularly in merry old England.

Sheesh, the more people reveal their fantasies about and attractions to these heaps it doesn't half make you wonder.
 
martinbo said: ↑
Does that make me some kind of a dupe?

I guess am I dupe as well as a current (repeat buyer of the) full size RR owner. I plan to replace my "11 with the new sport. I'll be damned to let Kilcrohane's banter dissuade me from not buying another Rover especially sense I haven't had any reliability issues after 100K+ miles.

Does Kilcrohane have anything to say about that?
 
Oh you come on now. :)

Jeez, what does it take with you - that piece of track isn't as easy as you make out. Front wheel up in the air like that - not quite the piece-of-cake for even a Fiesta as you suggest.

Anyhow, I'm not trying to convince you - that would be like trying to get Robert Mugabe to have tea with the queen - I understand your position on this maker's products. I just don't see nearly as an inferior "heap" as you do - if anything I see it as (almost) a class leader in all-round SUV versatility. It's only true drawback is the prohibitively expensive pricing.
 
Don't tell him how to behave.

Yes Klier, because you have NEVER told someone how to behave on here have you?

Does Kilcrohane have anything to say about that?

Of course he doesn't.

In the Macan thread he consantly accused Auto Express and Autocar of trying to undermine the Macan........I then posted the front cover of Auto Express from the 22nd May (I was reading it at the time handed to me by my dad) and the whole front cover was taken up by a photo of the Macan with the words "Hottest SUV of 2014" above it.


http://www.germancarforum.com/commu...macan-spyshots-info.43056/page-12#post-647525

http://www.germancarforum.com/commu...macan-spyshots-info.43056/page-12#post-645704

Not a response from Kilcrohane.

A lot of what he says simply isn't true, and at the worst, are out and out lies.
 
2014 Land Rover Range Rover Sport

A Split Personality Makes For The Best Range Rover Yet

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Vital Stats

Engine:
SC 5.0L V8
Power:
510 HP / 461 LB-FT
Transmission:
8-Speed Auto
0-60 Time:
5.0 Seconds
Top Speed:
155 MPH (Limited)
Drivetrain:
Four-Wheel Drive
Curb Weight:
5,093 LBS
Seating:
2+3
MPG:
14 City / 19 HWY
Base Price:
$63,495
As-Tested Price:
$103,000 (est.)
Research the 2014 Land Rover Range Rover Sport »


Tough as it no doubt was to engineer the new-for-2013 Land Rover Range Rover, I'm willing to bet that the company's engineers sweated a little harder over the launch of this 2014 Range Rover Sport. After all, the Sport is Land Rover's unlikely volume leader – it accounted for nearly 38 percent of the company's US sales in 2012. But beyond that, the Sport has to embody all of the unstoppable off-road attributes of anything wearing a Range Rover badge while, at the same time, being the brand's on-road dynamics flagship.

This thing has to hug curves and rip along the finest tree-lined roads the English countryside has to offer, and then be able to power upstream in a three-foot-deep river after only the touch of a button and the turn of a dial. It should be able to hit its electronically limited top speed of 155 miles per hour on tarmac with total poise and then negotiate a narrow rock crawl at a 40-degree angle with the same sort of confidence. Oh, and it needs to be comfortable and quiet, with room for many adults and their things, wrapped in sheetmetal that looks good when it's clean and even better with a fresh coat of mud. The Range Rover Sport has to do, well, everything.

So when it came time to put its new all-star to the test, Land Rover invited me across The Pond where I drove the 2014 Range Rover Sport over pavement and rocks and through mud and water. To say it handled everything off-road with aplomb would be an understatement. And to say that it's a dynamic joy on-road wouldn't give enough credit where credit is due.

But to say that the new Range Rover Sport is the best Land Rover – and maybe the best luxury SUV – that money can buy... well, now we're onto something.

With the Big Daddy non-Sport Range Rover, Land Rover engineers had a simple task: Make it better, but don't screw it up. In other words, keep it a Range Rover, but add a bit of comfort, improve the fuel economy, and, what the hell, throw a curvy line or two into its design. The end result, we found, stays true to all of the core Range Rover values while being, you know, better. Thus, mission accomplished.

That's good news for the Sport, too. Unlike the previous generation, which was based on the chassis that underpins the LR4 SUV, the new Sport is the Eve to the Range Rover's Adam, benefitting from its stronger, lighter aluminum bones. In fact, while the new Range Rover is some 700 pounds lighter than the model it replaces, the Sport is bereft of over 800 pounds versus the old version, while riding on a wheelbase a full seven inches longer than before. Elsewhere, the 2014 Sport is dimensionally similar to the 2013 model – width has actually decreased slightly and the vehicle's overall height has been reduced by one-tenth of an inch – but the in-person proportions certainly do make the Sport look more well-rounded and robust than before.

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Basically, it no longer looks like a Range Rover that's been left in the dryer for too long. And while it's no secret that much of the Range Rover Sport's design DNA has been inspired by the smaller Evoque, this new SUV is a handsome, rugged thing, with front and rear fascias that won't be mistaken for anything but a Land Rover. LED running lamps are found up front in the same design as the Range Rover, and out back, small, squared-off taillamps flank a very clean, short rump. From the profile, Evoque inspiration is the most apparent, with a raked roofline that can be had in either matching body color or contrasting colors like gray or the black of this test car. Combine it with the privacy glass that US-spec Range Rover Sport models will come standard with, and the black-on-whatever color scheme will no doubt be a favorite.

A number of wheel options are available, starting with 19-inch rollers on the low end and moving up to gigantic 22-inch alloys. My top-trim Autobiography was fitted with the attractive, 21-inch five-spoke wheels you see here, wrapped in 275/45-series Pierlli Scorpion Verde all-terrain tires. Behind them reside beefy Brembo brakes with vented rotors at all four corners – 15-inchers up front, 14s out back.

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Those stoppers are important, given the fact that the Autobiography model also comes with the most potent Range Rover engine available: a 5.0-liter supercharged V8 that pumps out 510 horsepower and 461 pound-feet of torque. I spent some time with this engine in the Jaguar XFR sedan last year and pretty much fell in love. Here, with an additional 700 pounds to lug around versus that shapely four-door, the engine still provides more than enough power with all the punch and pizzazz you'd expect. Seriously, this supercharged V8 is a bombshell of an engine, able to move the nearly 5,100-pound, all-wheel-drive Range Rover Sport to 60 mph in five seconds flat. That's a decrease of nearly one full second versus the heavier 2013 model, which uses this same engine in its Supercharged trim. Leaner is indeed meaner – and more efficient, too. According to Land Rover, the supercharged V8's fuel economy has improved, though our friends at AutoblogGreen will still balk at its 14 mpg city, 19 mpg highway, 16 mpg combined rating. At least that's better than the 14 mpg combined number from last year.

Gone is the naturally aspirated 5.0-liter V8 from the Range Rover lineup, replaced instead by a supercharged 3.0-liter V6 that also finds a home under the hood of the Jaguar XF, XJ and F-Type, good for 19 mpg combined here. I never managed to get the keys to a V6-powered Range Rover during my time in the UK, but other folks who drove it described it as being perfectly pleasant, though not nearly as engaging as the larger V8. Makes sense to me, and while the six-cylinder engine may end up being the volume choice when the Range Rover Sport goes on sale in the US later this summer, there's a whole lot of sweetness to be had with that supercharged V8.

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Beyond the straight-line acceleration, this thing was absolutely on-point at all times during my drive, largely thanks to the smooth and precise operator that is the new, ZF-sourced eight-speed automatic transmission. Unless you're really hammering the Range Rover Sport, you won't even know that the transmission is doing its job – shifts are imperceptibly smooth. And should you choose to plunk the gear selector into Sport mode and play with the steering wheel-mounted paddles – and you should – you'll be rewarded with quick, crisp shifts that are almost dual-clutch-like in their responsiveness while going both up and down through the gears. In terms of transmission engagement, the Range Rover Sport is far better than what I had expected, and more enjoyable to use than other vehicles in its class, save perhaps a BMW X5 M. And while blasting along the backroads of England and Wales, I eagerly opted for the paddle setup during long stretches of back-and-forth curves. But even when left to its own devices, the eight-speed unit is a trusty friend that will always have you exactly where you need to be in the rev range, every time.

The body is now 25-percent stiffer, which aids in reducing roll during cornering, though there's still noticeable fore-aft pitch during takeoff and hard stops, and the air suspension will still flex a bit when you're really cornering. (You can stiffen a body all you want, but with a high center of gravity, roll is still going to happen.) Supercharged and Autobiography models come standard with Land Rover's Terrain Response 2 system and a 50/50 torque split, and in addition to all of the off-road capability that lies within, there's a new Dynamic mode with active torque vectoring. Base-level SE and HSE models with the 3.0-liter V6 make do with a standard 42/58 front/rear torque split in Terrain Response 1, with no active vectoring, though the more robust Terrain Response system is available as a $1,300 option.

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But don't think that the Sport is just a slightly better handling version of the larger Range Rover. It may use many of the same mechanicals, but the suspension and chassis components have been specifically tuned for Sport application. In fact, the Range Rover Sport perhaps does the whole ride/handling balance better than its classmates, even the Porsche Cayenne. Sporting SUVs are usually great only on smooth surfaces, but the adaptive air suspension of the Range Rover is well set up to make instant adjustments over coarse road surfaces. I'm willing to bet it'll be just as nice to drive back home in Detroit as it was across The Pond.
The vast majority of Range Rover Sport buyers will never see anything but smooth pavement and maybe – maybe – the occasional dirt road leading up to a weekend getaway home. But there are people who actually use these things for their full range of capability, and in scenarios where your wheels are being placed on dirt, mud, sand, snow, or even underwater, the Sport delivers the same off-road capability as the larger Range Rover, in a smaller, easier to maneuver package.

Conveniently, my test route included a stint at the Land Rover Experience, where the company has built a full range of off-road courses to showcase its vehicles' capabilities. I happily pointed the Range Rover Sport's nose down two-track mud trails, up steep grades and through deep, muddy water, with not a single gripe or unwillingness to move forward from the vehicle. The coolest feature we won't get in the States is the company's wade depth sensors, which uses sensors placed around the vehicle to tell you if you're getting too close to the three-foot wading maximum. But no matter, if you do decide to caulk the wagon and ford the river, the Range Rover will be just fine. Do what I did, and instead of crossing the river, make a right turn and drive upstream for a little while. It can handle it. I promise.

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And while you're wading in muddy waters, notice that you're still sitting inside a comfortable, well-appointed interior. There's something oddly fascinating about trudging through mud and muck and being able to adjust the level of your seat heater at the same time, but this is exactly what makes the whole Range Rover package so special. It is at once an impeccable off-road machine and a superb luxury cruiser, full of the latest tech and high-quality materials.
That said, we still have qualms with a few of the Range Rover Sport's interior points, though they're largely housed behind the touchscreen infotainment interface. Simply put, Land Rover – and Jaguar, for that matter – is still too far behind the competition in terms of infotainment technology. It's not that the functionality isn't there, it's just that the whole system isn't very driver-intuitive, and even with the improved response times of the touchscreen, it still lags in a MyFord Touch-like manner. Land Rover admits to being behind the times in this department, and considering the fact that its engineers have created a vehicle that's capable of climbing mountains one minute and then hugging curves on canyon roads the next, I'm willing to cut them some slack.

But otherwise, the Range Rover Sport's cabin is a warm, inviting place, with plenty of different color combinations for the seats (including this brothel-spec red and black), dashboard and center console panels. Leather is standard all around, with nice woods and other trim surfaces (aluminum or piano black) accenting the doors and control stack.

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Nothing inside is really substantially better than the prior Range Rover Sport, and that's fine – everything is still comfortable and stylish, like it always was. Where massive improvements have been made, however, are in the back. Because of the longer wheelbase, rear seat ingress and egress has been improved substantially, as has rear legroom. What's more, Land Rover is now offering an optional third row of seats in the Sport – something my test car wasn't fitted with, and something I didn't have a chance to experience this time around. I don't anticipate it getting much use, but it's nice to know it's available. Curiously, Land Rover still doesn't offer a third row on the larger Range Rover, but spy shots suggest a long-wheelbase model is coming soon, and it may remedy the issue.

Pricing for the 2014 Sport starts at $63,495 for the base SE with a 3.0-liter V6, and goes as high as $93,295 for the Autobiography with the supercharged 5.0-liter V8. Decked out with nearly all the trimmings, the test car you see here stickers for just over $100,000, all in.

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Considering that the full-strength Range Rover Supercharged starts at $100,000 and the Autobiography model commands an additional $30,000 on top of that, I'm hard pressed to find a single reason why you'd actually want to own the bigger of the two. In fact, these days, Land Rover tells us that proper Range Rover owners don't turn their noses up at Sport buyers, and that many owners have one of each in their garage. (If you have the means, then by all means.)

But really, you only need one, and for my money, it'd be the Range Rover Sport, without question. It does everything the larger Range Rover can do with a better focus on handling and dynamics at a lower price point. You really don't lose anything by buying the Sport, except maybe a little bit of interior room and some very, very slight off-road capability. And what you gain is a whole new level of on-road dynamic prowess that the Land Rover brand has not seen before. This isn't just the best Range Rover Sport yet – it's the best Range Rover. Period.
- http://www.autoblog.com/2013/07/03/2014-land-rover-range-rover-sport-review-first-drive-video/
 

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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