Range Rover Sport [Spy Shots] 2022 Range Rover Sport


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.

tristatez28lt1

Tire Trailblazer
Messages
6,578
New 2022 Range Rover Sport spied testing for first time

01_38.webp


Camouflaged prototype of all-new Range Rover Sport spied ahead of expected 2022 release
The all-new Range Rover Sport has been spied testing in heavy camouflage ahead of its scheduled launch in 2022. The third generation of the Sport will be Land Rover’s answer to premium performance SUVs like the Porsche Cayenne.

Despite the heavy disguise, it’s clear from the photos that the next-generation model’s silhouette will not take a radical diversion from the existing model which has been on sale (punctuated by a facelift in 2018) since 2013. However, while the fairly boxy proportions remain, details like the head and tail lights are likely to take on a sleeker, Velar-inspired look.

Past and current iterations of the Range Rover Sport have offered buyers a practical seven-seat layout, setting it apart from many rivals, and we expect that to remain the case with this new model. Land Rover’s next-generation infotainment system, first used by the all-new Defender, will likely feature. In the Defender, this consists of a dual e-sim setup powered by a pair of Qualcomm Snapdragon 820Am processors and a Blackberry QNX operating system.


03_38.webp


While technical details are still some way from being confirmed, it’s safe to say that electrification will play a heavy part in the Range Rover Sport’s engine line-up. It’ll be one of three cars we know will utilise Land Rover’s MLA platform - the others being the next Range Rover and the all-new Range Rover crossover.

MLA can allow for a fully electric twin-motor setup, but it’s currently unclear as to whether this powertrain will make it into the next Range Rover Sport. What is certain is that electrification of some form will feature. The current model features a 2.0-litre turbocharged petrol engine paired with an electric motor which delivers 398bhp and achieves fuel consumption of 88.3mpg on the combined WLTP cycle.

New 2022 Range Rover Sport spied testing for first time
 
If it ain't broke don't fix it. The design will remain the same with styling from the Evoque.
 
The current RR Sport is a good looking SUV, so they dont have to change much. My guess is the chassis and interior will see the biggest changes.
 
New-Gen 2022 Range Rover Sport Spied, Could Mark Return To BMW V8 Engines

outgoing Range Rover Sport has been around since 2013, but it is, and in today’s market, this makes it pretty old.

Luckily, the British company is already working on its successor, and our spy photographers snapped another prototype of the BMW X5, Mercedes-Benz GLE and Audi Q7 challenger out testing in the cold.

It will be a while until the heavy camo and cladding start coming off, but the design is understood to be an evolution of the current model with plenty of styling cues borrowed from the Velar. It will retain, however, the series’ characteristic square profile and prominent front end.

The prototype seen playing on a snowy road in northern Europe had a quad exhaust pipe layout. On top of that, our spies said that the engine sounded very nice, hinting at a possible V8 engine. While there’s no way of debugging the rumor, Land Rover is tipped to be working on a comprehensive engine deal with BMW, which will see the latter lend its four-cylinder and V8 turbo units to the next-gen Range Rover flagship, and they could do the same to the Sport model. JLR’s new straight-six turbo in both mild and full-hybrid variants will also be on offer.

As for the platform, the third generation Range Rover Sport is believed to be based on JLR’s new MLA (Modular Longitudinal Architecture) which has been designed to accommodate an assortment of different powertrains including internal combustion engines, mild hybrid systems, plug-in hybrid systems and fully electric powertrains. It will be shared among others with the upcoming Jaguar XJ electric flagship sedan.

The all-new Range Rover Sport is believed to be introduced at the end of 2021 or early 2022.

PHOTO GALLERY
  • 2022-range-rover-sport-1-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-2-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-3-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-4-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-5-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-6-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-8-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-9-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-10-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-11-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-12-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-13-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-14-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-19-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-20-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-21-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-22-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-23-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-24-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-25-300x163.webp

  • 2022-range-rover-sport-26-300x163.webp
Photo Credits: CarPix for CarScoops
 
Mods, can we please change the title to Range Rover/Range Rovere Sport? Thanks.

JLR Won’t Let Pandemic Delay Development Of All-New Range Rover

all-new 5th generation Range Rover through its early development paces, as the luxury SUV is scheduled to hit global showrooms sometime next year.

According to Autocar, work on the new Range Rover will not be delayed, despite the carmaker having to close its production facilities and pause the launch of the all-new Land Rover Defender. Prototypes for the former were spotted recently undergoing cold weather testing.

Meanwhile, hot weather trials are expected to take place in the coming weeks, and over the course of the year, the camouflage on the prototypes will get thinner and thinner, revealing a familiar yet updated design.

Even camouflaged, the prototypes appear to feature wider front and rear tracks, as well as more prominent wheel arches, which should help the new model look more imposing than its predecessor, which has been on sale since 2012.

jlr-readies-new-range-rover-39.webp


The new Range Rover will utilize the carmaker’s MLA architecture, which should deliver a reduction in warranty and reliability problems, while also allowing for over-the-air software updates. The new model should also get a BMW-sourced 4.4-liter twin turbo V8 unit, aimed at markets such as the Middle East or California. Other drivetrains will include a plug-in hybrid system as well as all-electric variants, to go with the usual assortment of gasoline and diesel options.

The Mk5 Range Rover should give JLR a much-needed financial boost, at a time when the global economy is expected to begin growing again, following the current lockdown.

PHOTO GALLERY
  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-1-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-2-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-3-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-4-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-5-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-6-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-7-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-8-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-9-300x163.jpg

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-10-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-11-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-12-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-13-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-14-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-15-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-16-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-17-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-18-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-19-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-20-300x163.webp

  • jlr-readies-new-range-rover-21-300x163.webp
 
Jaguar Land Rover readies 2021 Range Rover amid lockdown delays

Mk5 SUV edges closer to production as coronavirus disrupts Defender launch and hits sales

  • edit5-land-rover-range-rover-render-2020-static-front.webp
  • 4-land-rover-range-rover-2020-spy-shot.webp

    Spy shots reveal more prominent wheel arches and wider tracks
  • 3-land-rover-range_rover-render-2020-static-rear.webp

    The new Range Rover (imagined by Autocar above) could use a BMW-developed V8 in some markets
  • 2-land-rover-range-rover-2020-spy-shot.webp

    The Mk5 Range Rover should reach showrooms late next year
The all-new, fifth-generation Range Rover is in the first stages of testing before it hits the showrooms at the end of 2021, tasked with leading Jaguar Land Rover out of the coronavirus-induced slump that’s expected to affect the global car industry for much of this year and beyond.

Despite the closure of JLR’s production facilities and the paused launch of the new Land Rover Defender, it’s understood that there will be no let-up in the development of either the Range Rover or the battery-electric replacement for the Jaguar XJ, which will also go on sale late next year.

Pictures of a disguised prototype test vehicle show the large SUV undergoing a winter testing regime, with hot weather trials due to take place in the coming weeks. They also show how much of the stance of the new Range Rover, which is based on JLR’s Modular Longitudinal Architecture (MLA), will change. The front and rear tracks seem to be wider, it appears to have more prominent wheel arches and the prototype has rather less of a barrel-sided look than the current model.

Even with the Mk5 model in disguise, it seems Land Rover’s design studio has managed to give the SUV an even more imperious and imposing look, which is crucial to the Range Rover’s commercial appeal.

A close look at the pictures suggest that the ‘face’ of the new model is not so different from that of the current vehicle, marked out by the wide and deep grille and Velar-style slim headlight units.

The company’s new flagship will replace the current Range Rover, which was launched back in 2012, and should give JLR a much-needed high profit-margin boost just as the global economy is expected to begin to emerge from the effects of the current lockdown.

4-land-rover-range-rover-2020-spy-shot.webp


The fourth-generation Range Rover has been a very strong product for the company, selling nearly 53,000 units globally last year, only a fraction down on sales in 2018. The Mk5 will again be sold in standard and long-wheelbase forms, but that’s where the direct comparisons with the current car end.

The new model will be the first Land Rover built on an MLA structure that promises to transform JLR’s competitiveness. The new platform is expected to deliver a reduction in warranty and reliability problems as well as allowing software-over-the-air (SOTA) updates. MLA can also accommodate conventional internal combustion engines, plug-in hybrid and battery-electric powertrains.

Other advantages of the MLA’s SOTA technology could include reducing the need for dealer recalls, predictive servicing that allows dealer visits to be automatically scheduled and even user-based insurance schemes. Data generated by real-world use of MLA-based vehicles will also help inform future model development, say insiders.

Unlike today’s ageing Range Rover architecture, the new MLA platform has been designed from the outset as a ‘flex-fuel’ components set. Autocar understands the Mk5 Range Rover will make use of a BMW-sourced petrol V8 – which will be aimed at markets such as the Middle East and California – but little other information has leaked about the other combustion engine options.

It’s known that JLR and BMW are working on developing electric motors that will be used by the MLA-based vehicles and are expected to be built at JLR’s Ingenium factory near Wolverhampton.

The engine facility’s switch, at least partly, to the production of electric drive modules (EDMs) suggests that JLR might adopt other BMW-sourced engines for the MLA platform. Considering the huge investment coming up for the planned Euro 7-compliant diesels, oil-burning engines could be a strong contender for a co-operative project between JLR and BMW. But the firm is unlikely to abandon its newly launched mild-hybrid Ingenium straight-six petrol engine so soon, so expect that to also feature at the car’s launch.

Article continues below advertisement
Plug-in hybrid versions of the Mk5 Range Rover are expected to have one electric motor on the rear axle as well as another embedded in the transmission. It has been claimed that the electrically driven rear axle will further improve the car’s off-road ability, because of the ability to finely meter out the torque.

A pure-electric version of the Range Rover is also being considered. The model could have a battery of up to 100kWh and electric motors directly driving the front and rear wheels. However, it’s expected that any electric Range Rover would be a limited-production model targeted at city users in Asian markets. The upcoming MLA-based ‘Road Rover’ crossover is likely to be the lead Land Rover electric car.

The introduction of the MLA components set, however, and the need to completely refit the Solihull and Castle Bromwich factories, is costing JLR a considerable amount of money.

According to records of a meeting between JLR chief financial officer (CFO) Adrian Mardell and a number of investment banks on 31 January this year, the investment in the MLA last year was a massive £2.5 billion, although it was significantly higher the year before.

Between October and December last year, JLR spent £892 million on new investments – slightly more than the cash profit made on vehicle sales over the same three-month period.

The rolling global shutdown in the wake of the coronavirus pandemic isn’t good news for JLR, which had been greatly improving its financial position until the shutdowns in March.

Although overall vehicle sales had fallen slightly in the last three months of last year (Jaguar was down 21% year on year and Land Rover up 6%), overall revenue was up and the company’s Project Charge and Charge+ strategies had made good headway in reducing costs. The upshot was that the company made a £372m profit between October and December.

Sales were also picking up again in China after the well-publicised troubles in 2018 and 2019. Chinese sales jumped 24% in the last three months of last year, helping to offset a 10% fall in the EU.

Sales were down 12% in the UK, but this was explained by some of the company’s lower-margin models being removed from the market, including some variants of Jaguar’s saloon models and the E-Pace.

According to Mardell, the European sales fall was mostly because sales of the Jaguar I-Pace EV fell by 2500 in the Netherlands following taxation changes by the government.

There was, however, a significant upside earlier this year, when the launch of the Defender was imminent. Production of JLR’s most important new vehicle for years began in January and the model roll-out to showrooms was due to start last month.

JLR hasn’t revealed how many Defenders it expected to build, but Mardell told bankers that orders had been “five times” what they would have expected pre-launch. He added that around a million people had completed Defender configurations on the Land Rover website, when under normal circumstances “very few” people complete online configurations. The interest was cited as another reason JLR expected the Defender to be “super-successful”.

Another crucial new model, the plug-in hybrid Discovery Sport, will be revealed and go on sale in the coming weeks, but building sales momentum in the short term will be tough.

Mardell had described this as a key model for JLR. “The Discovery Sport is our biggest seller, and obviously the market response to it is going to be important,” the meeting’s minutes reveal. “Not only from a volume perspective, but also a [CO2 regulation] compliance perspective over the next 12-24 months.”

Mardell told bankers that around 5% of JLR’s output is plug-in hybrid but that this is expected to increase by about “4-5% per year” between 2019 and 2024.

The Discovery Sport plug-in hybrid aside, it’s clear that the Defender would have provided a massive revenue boost for the company as it finalises the MLA platform and factory refit, but that lift has now been pushed to the second half of this year at the earliest. However, such a vehicle could be a blessing when dealing with subdued markets as the world economy recovers and reopens.

This year will doubtless be exceptionally rough for JLR. The shutdown disruption comes at the end of a long period of huge MLA investment, but the Defender will arrive at a vital time and could provide a crucial bridge of cash generation for the firm over the next 18 months.
 
Now is not the time to botch this by making it look like a giant Velar. This has to retain a degree of stateliness.

M
 
Now is not the time to botch this by making it look like a giant Velar.
That’s exactly what they did with the Evoque and what they do with the Sport. Out going hard edges and in comes flush door handles and smooth panels.

Those who want a rugged or butch body will have to buy a Defender.
 

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

Trending content

Latest posts


Back
Top