You don’t have far to go from Land Rover’s UK headquarters these days to find the developing world.
This is not, rest assured, because Brexit is biting particularly hard around the English Midlands and property prices in leafy Leamington Spa have suddenly taken a drastic turn (heaven forbid). It’s actually because there’s a rutted, ridge-strewn, pothole-ridden lane, made of gravel and mud and sand, at JLR’s head office proving ground, that’s called the Developing World test track – and it’s intended to be not unlike the kind of roads a Land Rover might be called upon to use anywhere from Kisangani to Kolkata, via the rougher agricultural spots of Kettering and the Kielder Forest.
And right now, wouldn’t you know it, there’s even a Land Rover on it. A real one. The Land Rover, you might say – and certainly so as far as anyone in product planning at the British firm is concerned. It is the direct descendent of the car with which the company was founded: ‘L663’, or the all-new Defender. And as you join us, it is being driven pretty hard by Land Rover’s Andy Deeks, product engineering team leader for durability and reliability, right over the aforementioned ruts, bumps, ridges and potholes.
Andy is driving quite sternly – angrily, you might even say, like a man with a point to prove. All the while he’s explaining that, while doing the data capture that is crucial to the engineering development of this car, his engineers drove harder still, doing their best to torture every rattle, wobble, shudder, clunk, squeak and eventual component failure from this car in order to pin them down and chase them out of the finished product, one by one. They seem to have done that pretty well, at least as far as I can tell from where I’m sitting – although I’ve only been here in the passenger seat for a few minutes.
That chasing process is now long over, of course. The all-new Defender is just weeks away from its grand unveiling to the press and public, and production is all set to start. It’ll be rolling off a production line in Slovakia – that much we already know. And it’ll be a different sort of Defender from the one that bowed out in Solihull in 2016 after nearly seven decades of almost continuous production. It was always going to be so: but how much different? Now’s our chance to at least begin to find out.
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I've heard there are going to
I've heard there are going to be lots of different varients, so who knows what will be on offer. I would like to see some basic versions along side the plush ones too.
Maybe this new Defender could
Maybe this new Defender could be a model Discovery 4 owners could happily buy, then they could quietly kill off Discovery 5 and pretend it never existed.
catnip wrote:
Yes, they totally screwed up the Discovery 5. I cannot look at that car without literally throwing up.
Open minded
Despite my earlier pessimism about what damage McGovern might do to the design of the new Defender, I’m now cautiously more optimistic about its prospects. I never thought JLR would reintroduce a very basic vehicle suitable for military, farm and extreme environment use, so a design that looks so similar to a tougher Discovery 4 doesn’t surprise me and is at least not another variation of the rest of the LR/RR range. The underpinnings are very different to the old Defender, but it’s too early to tell whether this is an inspired decision or not.
A really big issue, however, will be JLR’s pricing policy. When you consider that Jeep have ambitiously set a starting price of £45k for a 2 door Wrangler JL, and knowing JLR always regard their vehicles as very premium (certainly above Jeep), it doesn’t bode well for anyone expecting the new Defender to be “reasonably” priced. Nevertheless I’m eagerly awaiting the official unveil and just hope JLR can deliver a sales success. Given the company’s financial situation, I hope they don’t get this wrong.