New York, Melbourne, Bermuda... there’s nothing like an exotic road trip. And this is nothing like an exotic road trip, because we’re talking about New York in Lincolnshire, Melbourne in Derbyshire and Bermuda in Warwickshire.
These three internationally renowned place names appear as waypoints on the 330-mile itinerary we’re tracing around the heart of England to see how the box-fresh Jaguar XE – in benefit-in-kind-beating 2.0 diesel form – fares when faced with a long day in the life of a company car. And although we’re no Phileas Foggs, photographer Will Williams and I are hoping to uncover some of the exoticism hidden among these green and pleasant lands.
8.53am Northampton services, M1
Although neither green nor pleasant, Northampton services at junction 15a of the M1 is a handy place to meet Williams and our Polaris White XE. The car is in Portfolio spec, which is the plushest of the four trim levels available on cooking models and, at £35,425, splits the difference between the cheapest XE – the cloth-upholstered, £26,990, 197bhp petrol four-pot SE – and the range-topping, £44,865 XE S that packs the 335bhp supercharged V6 from the Jaguar F-Type.
A stack of extras adds around £10k to our car’s price – unrepresentative of the norm but worthy in terms of letting us trial features such as adaptive suspension (£800), head-up display (£1000) and driving position memory pack with folding door mirrors (£935). Adaptive cruise control (£1500) is the only omission that frequent trips like this might justify.
After brimming the fuel tank, there’s a moment to appreciate the cabin before we depart. Leather and soft-touch finishes abound – you have to reach down to the door bins to find anything more brittle – and there’s a definite feeling of luxury, although the dark tones in our car conspire with the chunky, high-set centre console to make the cabin seem cosy more than airy.
The sweeping top of the dashboard crowns a handsome, interesting environment, though, and the rotary selector for our car’s eight-speed automatic gearbox complements the layout where a manual gearlever might interrupt it. A poke around the rear cabin reveals enough knee room for one 6ft 2in-tall person to sit behind another, although head and shoulder room are tight. With my driving position stored (easy) and the sat-nav, standard across the range, set (equally simple, subject to a little software latency), we’re off.
11.03am Boston, Lincolnshire - 80.1 miles
Unlike many of our waypoints, this one did actually give its name to its more famous counterpart. Puritans from this Lincolnshire town named Boston, Massachusetts in 1630, 143 years before all that tea was wasted and things got awkward with the homeland.
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I've driven the XE, and......
The Jag drove very well, it handles as well as the 3-Series with but it rode better but I found the steering worse and a bit aloof at times (not that I'm saying the BMW's is brilliant). But what I found disappointing was the quality. While the interior looks ok and is a bit more exciting looking than the BMW's, the quality of materials is quite frankly poor for a premium car. None of the plastics come even close to that of a current Golf's, never mind an A4 or C-Class'. And I also found the seats gave some discomfort too. The BMW's interior isn't the greatest quality, which itself is a step back from an E90's, but it's much better than the Jag's.
The refinement wasn't any better that the BMW's while the engine isn't a match, being noisier and less flexible while the the throttle response was a bit dim witted too. The gearchanges weren't as slick for an auto and the brakes I felt were a bit spongier, albeit still very good.
Overall, I do find it hard to understand how the XE, based on this particular model at least, is a class leader and by the margin Autocar proclaims it to be too.
2.0 petrol
Adrian987 wrote: Got to ask,
I'd say the one I test drove (240ps) is a 3.5 star car but the other XEs may be better and a more complete package. I know the 3 Series I've got isn't the pick of the range but as a complete package I think it's better than the XE I drove. In my view, and from experience, the latest Mondeo is a better car than the XE, but then the Ford is a very good car, even if the interior quality is poor in places.
Vignale
Lanehogger wrote: Well, as a
Not a fan of BMW but I have to agree, IMO despite the hype and the 7 year wait, I think the XE was released too early and the customer is being used (just like VW do) as a guinea pig, its unforgivable that a company like JLR (through the media) can lead us to believe its ingenium engines are best in class, they are clearly not, its released the XE with Ford ecoboost petrol engines (nothing wrong with them in isolation, but they are hardly premium), the all lightweight all aluminium, turned out to be "nearly all aluminium" and no lighter than its rivals, despite having a smaller boot, tighter rear passenger room and tiny (still not mentioned by the reviews) fuel tanks..
Why is that, because its been rushed, the ingenium petrol engines are not ready, even the "new" Discovery Sport is just a very heavily facelifted Freelander2 with 10 year old diesel engines (the same engine as the X-Type had).
Meanwhile Volvo have designed and built in house a whole new state of the art petrol, diesel and hybrid engine range that are as good or better than the rivals, and built a brand new from the ground up XC90, that has gone straight to the top of its class, because it deserves to be, not because of the hype, it will also be replacing its whole range within the next 4 years, if the XC90 is anything to go on, the new S90/V90 range will steal sales from Mercedes, Audi, BMW and Jaguar.
Poor economy
The truth will out.