RE: Range Rover SVAutobiography Dynamic: Driven

RE: Range Rover SVAutobiography Dynamic: Driven

Thursday 26th January 2017

Range Rover SVAutobiography Dynamic: Driven

The SVR for grown ups is just as appealing as that prospect sounds



Maybe bling isn't your thing, but you've got to admire the 'glamourisation' of Land Rover these days, if only from the point of view of inexorably rising sales. Gerry McGovern, Design Director, is utterly unapologetic about the luxurious transformation his models are undergoing. Even the poor old Discovery has been stripped of its boxy, utilitarian shape, and forced into some sexy, figure-hugging clothes. And wait until you see the latest addition to the Range Rover family, set for a reveal at the Geneva motor show in March.

SVR power, with some better manners
SVR power, with some better manners
For now we have the latest Special Vehicle Operations (SVO) Range Rover, the SVAutobiography Dynamic. This is a short-wheelbase (hence more 'dynamic') version of the SVAutobiography that launched in New York last year. Whereas the latter was intended for passengers, with acres of legroom and a fully decked out rear cabin with chiller cabinet et al, the former has a decidedly more driver-focused character. Whether dreams are made of this stuff... well, each to their own.

And so we have the same 5.0-litre supercharged V8 petrol engine, developing 550hp and 502lb ft of torque, as found in the jackhammering, mountain-slaying, subtle-as-a-box-of-frogs Sport SVR, but it's now been told to sit down and shut up - "calibrated", as the engineers have it. The result in the grown-up Range Rover is something altogether more pleasant: the power isn't dialled down one jot, but the raucousness is. This 2.5-tonne slab of aluminium still shifts off the line, whippet-fast, clicking up through the eight-speed auto 'box imperceptibly, but it settles into a low-slung growl from the quad chrome exhausts and a long-legged gait that makes it a contender for cross-Continental cruising.

Waft car
The ride is a blessed relief, too. When it comes to luxury SUVs with a shedload of horsepower, the tendency of late is to dial out all roll for an unnervingly flat ride through fast corners. The result is then a 2.5-tonne, four-wheel-drive car that goes like stink round a circuit (because, you know, we all like to put an SUV through its paces on a track), but which creates at best a headache round twisting hairpins and at worst, like yours truly, a huge dose to travel sickness from the divorced sensation between brain and body. Give us a little bit of body roll any day of the week, please, not least to remind us of the unparalleled off-roading prowess the Land Rover badge still carries.

Careful on that interior spec now!
Careful on that interior spec now!
That's not to say this car wallows: careful revisions to the knuckles, links, springs and dampers mean the car sits 8mm lower and responds a little quicker to driver inputs. The Dynamic is also kitted out with Land Rover's Dynamic Response system, controlling the front and rear axles independently for greater low-speed agility and high-speed stability, and the Adaptive Dynamics tech that monitors vehicular movements up to 500 times a second, reacting to driver inputs and road surface changes to smooth out the drive.

The steering is a joy, too: entirely linear, without any of that strange unpredictable loading you get from some variable systems, butter-light through your fingertips but precise as a blade, partly due to that independent control of the axles, despite the car sitting on 21-inch or 22-inch alloys.

Dressed up for the town
Exterior styling hints that tell you this derivative has come out of the JLR toy box include side vents, bonnet finishes, grille, front bumper accents and badge all finished in Graphite Atlas, a stylish dark grey. The SVAutobiography is also the first Range Rover to get red calipers and Brembo brakes; not a bad idea given the combination of performance and weight.

Fast, assured, luxurious, enjoyable - it's good!
Fast, assured, luxurious, enjoyable - it's good!
Inside, there isn't quite the opulence of the LWB version with the focus having shifted back to the driver. But there are enough differentiators to mark it out as a cut above, not least the quilted leather on the seats, which come in duo tones. Our test car had black (Ebony) seats with strident red (Pimento) inserts - not for the faint-hearted. The gearshift paddles are a burnished red metal, with a red painted line circling the rotary gear selector. Smart, but not overly wacko. There's also a decent smattering of knurled aluminium on various knobs and switches, which seems to be the luxe material and finish of choice for switches these days. It's a nice touch, and one you miss when you get back into an 'ordinary' Range Rover - i.e. one that's a mere £90K - and find yourself surrounded by black plastic.

Oh, and that 1700W Meridian Reference sound system is the business, which, frankly, you'd expect from a car that values a premium experience inside the cabin as much as it does the performance under the bonnet. That combo might not be to everyone's taste, but when you consider that SVO is all about the twin pillars of performance and luxury, this is surely the derivative that best exemplifies the badge.


RANGE ROVER SVAUTOBIOGRAPHY DYNAMIC
Engine:
5,000cc supercharged V8
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
Power (hp): 550@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 502@3,500rpm
0-62mph: 5.4sec
Top speed: 155mph (limited)
Weight: 2,457kg (EU with driver)
MPG: 22.1 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 299g/km
Price: £132,800

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Author
Discussion

dotgillingham

Original Poster:

37 posts

96 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
I love it. And hate myself for it at the same time.

Spannerski

127 posts

112 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
That much power is wasted in something so heavy.
I just don't get this market.

tom scott

54 posts

229 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Where's the conclusion.
What is it really like to drive - just a long list here from the spec sheet.
No analysis or opinion.

Vroom101

828 posts

134 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
I shouldn't like it. But I do.









But not in that choice of colours. Dark green paint with black dash & oxblood red seats for me, thanks.

Krikkit

26,555 posts

182 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Vroom101 said:
But not in that choice of colours. Dark green paint with black dash & oxblood red seats for me, thanks.
Dark blue with cream for me, and a black dash and wheel.

I like the sillyness of this, it's completely wasteful but sufficiently bonkers at the same time.

I would have to wonder if it was worth the sizeable premium over a "normal" supercharged autobiography though.

PhilboSE

4,379 posts

227 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Spannerski said:
That much power is wasted in something so heavy.
I just don't get this market.
Imagine that you decide you want/need an SUV. Let's not debate the merits of that. Some people get them, some don't.

Having decided you want that type of car, why would you not want one with lots of power? ("I've bought a big heavy car so I don't need much power" - doesn't make sense).

em177

3,135 posts

165 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
I find it really interesting. Once there was a day when Range Rover interiors used to be a classy, elegant place to be:, such as this P38.



Then one day some tuning companies decided it would be a good idea to take the Land Rover range and cover the inside in ghastly red and black leathers and fabrics. The internet mocked.



The next day Land Rover decided it's interiors were terrible, and that they should listen to some bloke in Bradford, and make their OEM interiors like a prostitutes boudoir.



And at the end of the meeting decided they'd ask 130 grand for the privilege.

Erm, no thanks.


Edited by em177 on Thursday 26th January 14:13

Twoshoe

858 posts

185 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Looks terrific on the outside, revolting on the inside. Red adjacent to black never looks good (imho).

TUS373

4,522 posts

282 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
I am probably getting old, but a 6 figure tag (and well into that domain) is becoming the norm for stuff like this. It is fashion over function and to me the statement this vehicle makes is more "I have money" than I know my cars. A bit Emperor's clothes. Personally I would use that budget to buy 2 high end cars of a wildy different type than 1 that tries (too hard) to be everything. Reliability would be a worry too based on experiences of people I know who have purchased from this stable only to have been disappointed.


TUS373

4,522 posts

282 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
em177 said:
I find it really interesting. Once there was a day when Range Rover interiors used to be a classy, elegant place to be:, such as this P38.



Then one day some tuning companies decided it would be a good idea to take the Land Rover range and cover the inside in ghastly red and black leathers and fabrics. The internet mocked.



The next day Land Rover decided it's interiors were terrible, and that they should listen to some bloke in Bradford, and make their OEM interiors like a prostitutes boudoir.



And at the end of the meeting decided they'd ask 130 grand for the privilege.

Erm, no thanks.


Edited by em177 on Thursday 26th January 14:13
Grear post. Yes, Mr Khan has more than one comedy going.

George111

6,930 posts

252 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Twoshoe said:
Red adjacent to black never looks good (imho).
It might have done in the 70's !

Is this another Victoria Beckham design ? Looks like it . . . Footballer and WAG fodder now they feel threatened by the Bentayga thing ?

Yipper

5,964 posts

91 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
The RR is starting to look a bit dated on the inside and outside. Still a great car, but it needs a refresh.

KTF

9,823 posts

151 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
I don't like the 'lipstick red' on the inside or out. A more subtle colour would be better but then the target audience would probably disagree.

hyphen

26,262 posts

91 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Like the SWB and I'm sure the Meridian will sound great, Shame about the styling..

hyphen

26,262 posts

91 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
tom scott said:
Where's the conclusion.
What is it really like to drive - just a long list here from the spec sheet.
No analysis or opinion.
yes Might as well copy and paste the press release.

DonkeyApple

55,479 posts

170 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
As autobiographies go it's certainly more Peter Andre than Peter De La Billiere.

dandarez

13,294 posts

284 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all


That! has to rank as the most garish interior I have ever seen in 50 years of motoring. hurl

They've forgotten to add more red for the eyeball vents and gear knob, or was it a case of work in progress?

Bloody hell, are the panels on top of the dash a different red (maroon)?

I actually like reds - in fact, red can enhance other colours, even with black, but it needs to be in moderation.




Greg_D

6,542 posts

247 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
i don't see anything there worth a £25k premium over the 'standard' autobiography 5.0

I'll stick with my 'standard' one thanks...

GranCab

2,902 posts

147 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
Maybe the Kahn'd LR Defender was inspired by this sort of thing ? smile


jamespink

1,218 posts

205 months

Thursday 26th January 2017
quotequote all
GranCab said:
Maybe the Kahn'd LR Defender was inspired by this sort of thing ? smile

I think thats for a different kind of rough riding...