Land Rover Range Rover
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Land Rover Range Rover overall verdict
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The Range Rover is an icon and we don’t use the word as glibly as some. A long history has delivered some lemons, but the current generation Rangie is the best yet – comfort, understated style, luxury. If you’re in the market for a large posh 4x4, take a wildcard ride in a Rangie.
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Comfort
If you fancy something other than a large limo, try a Range Rover. The ride is one of the best in class, killing bumps and massacring road imperfections, especially in the variants with higher aspect-ratio tyres. The supercharged V8 is trying to be sporty and loses some of the comfort, which is a shame.
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Performance
If you want a reasonable and refined Rangie then the 3.6-litre V8 diesel is hard to beat; 200kW, 0-100km/h in 9.2 and 200km/h is probably all you'll ever need in such a big car. If you don't care about fuel bills, then take a punt on either the normally aspirated 4.4 V8 or the 4.2-litre supercharged - the forced induction car is genuinely fast for its size with 0-100km/h coming up in just 7.5 seconds and with a 209km/h top end.
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Cool
Billionaires and pop stars, rappers and lords all rate the Range Rover. You should too. It's the most regal 4x4 out there.
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Quality
Land Rover has banished the quality gremlins with the latest Range Rover. Well, almost; early air-suspension niggles should now be sorted. The interior is simply superb, great finishes and top end design make it a fabulous place to spend time - you will genuinely never get bored of sitting in here.
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Handling
A real surprise. Very little body roll (air suspension again) and a totally surefooted stance mean that you can clip along at a respectable pace - it's bulky, but you'll be surprised by its nimble reactions. Off-road the Range Rover is still well up with the best thanks to Land Rover's ‘Terrain Response' system which alters throttle maps and traction control to give you the best possible grip - only subsequently hampered by road-biased tyres. The steering's slightly numb, but we'll forgive it that when parking.
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Practicality
The split tailgate means that you can spread a picnic on the back when out charging around doing country pursuits. When not persuing the country, you can take advantage of massive space for five, a 535-litre boot and the knowledge that if you were to fold the seats down, you'd have 2091 litres to play with. You won't be delivering many washing machines, but it's nice to know that you could
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Running costs
Don't be fooled into thinking that the only expense in owning the premium-priced Range Rover is in its price tag. The diesel only gets 11.3L/10km, and the supercharged car will tip 16L/100km and worse if you get enthusiastic. Oh, and they start from $153,000...


