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It appears there is a replacement for displacement at Range Rover. Gone is the TDV8 for 2021, replaced with a more efficient and more powerful inline-six engine.
Contributor
Contributor
Goodbye turbo-diesel V8, hello Ingenium inline-six.
Range Rover has given its largest, most luxurious four-wheel drives a refresh for 2021, and the old-fashioned turbo-diesel V8 engine is in the firing line.
It’ll be replaced by a fresh 3.0-litre inline-six turbo-diesel backed by mild-hybrid technology, for stronger outputs and lower emissions than the larger unit it replaces.
Two versions will be available in the larger Range Rover: the D300, and the D350.
The former packs 221kW of power and 650Nm of torque, with a claimed fuel use figure of 8.6L/100km on the tougher WLTP test cycle. The latter ups power to 258kW and torque to 700Nm, but fuel use worsens to 9.2L/100km on the same WLTP test.
The Range Rover Sport is also offered with a D250 version with 183kW and 600Nm. Although it’s less powerful, even the base turbo-diesel is backed by mild-hybrid technology.
It’s not all about efficient towing engines, though. At the top end of the updated line-up sits the Range Rover SVAutobiography Dynamic Black edition.
Power still comes from a 5.0-litre supercharged petrol V8 engine with 416kW of power and 700Nm of torque, but the exterior blends Santorini Black paint with gloss black highlights, 22-inch wheels in black, and black brake calipers.
At the top end of the Range Rover Sport line-up sits the SVR Carbon Edition, with 423kW and 700Nm from its 5.0-litre supercharged petrol V8 engine.
As the name suggests, the exterior packs the full gamut of carbon-fibre trim pieces from the Range Rover SVO catalogue. They look distinctive, and help cut 30kg from the car’s weight figure.
It’s not a Caterham by any measure, but every little bit helps, right?
Regardless of which model you select, the 2021 Range Rover line-up now features Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard.
It’s also been updated to finally include autonomous emergency braking and lane-keeping assist as standard, although adaptive cruise control is still optional.
2021 Range Rover line-up for Australia
2021 Range Rover Sport line-up for Australia
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Scott Collie is an automotive journalist based in Melbourne, Australia. Scott studied journalism at RMIT University and, after a lifelong obsession with everything automotive, started covering the car industry shortly afterwards. He has a passion for travel, and is an avid Melbourne Demons supporter.
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