RE: Order books open for all-new Defender 90

RE: Order books open for all-new Defender 90

Wednesday 26th February 2020

Order books open for all-new Defender 90

Three-door Land Rover Defender now on sale following 'unprecedented demand' for 110



Land Rover has begun taking orders for the 90 variant of its new Defender. And, with the five-door 110 - due to reach the first customers in the spring - having experienced "unprecedented demand" since going on sale, there's good reason to expect that the three-door 90 will do just as well.

Available in standard, S, SE, HSE, X and First Edition trim levels, with a commercial model coming soon, the 90 can be specced as frugally or lavishly as buyers desire. Frugal being a relative term in this situation, of course, with the cheapest base spec 200hp, 2.0-litre diesel layout still coming in at £40,290 OTR. Buyers at that price won't be receiving anything comparable to the no-frills 90s of old, though. Automatic headlights and wipers, powerfold mirrors, heated seats, a DAB radio with Apple CarPlay and even puddle lamps are all included as standard kit.

From there the sky's the limit. The remaining engine options of 240hp 2.0-litre diesel, 300hp 2.0-litre petrol and 400hp 4.0-litre petrol (a plug-in hybrid will arrive later) can be mixed and matched largely at will. There are a couple of exceptions, however, with the First Edition - including a white contrast roof, front jump seat and air suspension - only available with the more powerful of the diesels and the X package exclusive to the new inline six petrol motor.


Tick those boxes and what you're left with is a fully-optioned, no holds barred Defender 90 P400X, complete with black contrast roof, walnut veneer, illuminated treadplates, a head-up display and an electronic active diff with torque vectoring by braking. All that performance will come in handy escaping from your bank manager, the X marking the same spot where a £75,475 bill will subsequently land.

That's by far and away the most expensive model, though, with a £20,000 chasm between it and the most costly HSE-specced, 300hp petrol iteration. Regardless of whether buyers opt for it or any of the other options presented to them, they'll receive the same 95 per cent new aluminium monocoque, 900mm wading capability, 50cm of wheel articulation and the ability to shrug off a 20cm kerb impact at 25mph. It's the same tough-as-nails Defender underneath, basically, whether it's coated in LED lights, Ebony Morzine headliners or premium badges or not.

As well as the 170 individual accessories available, each car can also be specced with one of four accessory packs - Explorer, Adventure, Country and Urban - to further tailor it toward its intended use. With features including a portable rinsing system, onboard air compressor, engine snorkels and expedition roof racks, there's surely something for outdoorsy, indoorsy and online-posery people of all stripes.


Finbar McFall, Land Rover's Global Product Marketing Director, said of the new 90: "We have experienced unprecedented demand for New Defender 110 and the official introduction of Defender 90 is sure to boost interest. As the family grows to include an efficient plug-in hybrid powertrain and commercial derivatives later this year, we look forward to continuing this success. If our experience with the Defender 110 is anything to go by, we can expect over half of customers to opt for one of the four Accessory Packs, making New Defender the most accessorised and personalised Land Rover we have ever produced."

Prospective buyers can head to Land Rover's website to configure and order their cars today.


See the Land Rover Defender walkaround video here




Author
Discussion

C.MW

Original Poster:

473 posts

69 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
If I was a diehard off road fan, I'd rather get a Suzuki Jimmny, revered just as much as one of the best off roaders at less than half the price. But, most who buy these would be city dwellers I guess, which wasn't the case with the previous gen model.

Bencolem

1,016 posts

239 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Who, didn’t realize there were really people called Finbar anymore.

oilit

2,623 posts

178 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
no 90 configurator on their website - 110 only :-(

The frightening thing is that in 1995 and 1998 I was buying new Range Rover Petrols for ~£40k - now you can't even get a Defender for that money...


I must be getting old....

NGK210

2,905 posts

145 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
When the gear shifter is moved left into manual/sport mode, it has the proper configuration: pull for up-shifts, push for down-shifts cool
Audi and VW, among others, kindly note the correct format: pull-push, not push-pull nono


Alucidnation

16,810 posts

170 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Christ, you would really need to be a die hard fan to buy one of those.


Bloody horrendous looking thing.

laugh

Mikee19

591 posts

96 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
oilit said:
no 90 configurator on their website - 110 only :-(

The frightening thing is that in 1995 and 1998 I was buying new Range Rover Petrols for ~£40k - now you can't even get a Defender for that money...


I must be getting old....
40k which is probably 70 - 80k today?

Plus a lot more, aids, going on inside.

Cold

15,233 posts

90 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
Christ, you would really need to be a die hard fan to buy one of those.


Bloody horrendous looking thing.

laugh
Article said:
having experienced "unprecedented demand" since going on sale
/Shrugs/

The Mad Monk

10,474 posts

117 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
oilit said:
no 90 configurator on their website - 110 only :-(

The frightening thing is that in 1995 and 1998 I was buying new Range Rover Petrols for ~£40k - now you can't even get a Defender for that money...


I must be getting old....
Thing is -

Are you still buying them? Whatever the price?

Mogsmex

447 posts

235 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Bencolem said:
Who, didn’t realize there were really people called Finbar anymore.
Fnarrr, Fnarr

ProCo2020

97 posts

197 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Whats the body coloured square for, a hatch? Can it be ordered without it as it looks horrendous.

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

234 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
What does "unprecedented" really mean in this context? It's probably JLR spin.

They are unlikely to say "sales are not bad but nthey are not exactly flying out the doors.."


Twoshoe

851 posts

184 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Alucidnation said:
Christ, you would really need to be a die hard fan to buy one of those.


Bloody horrendous looking thing.

laugh
I disagree - I think it looks great. Whether or not it's reliable of course might be a more important question.

Edited by Twoshoe on Wednesday 26th February 08:03

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
ProCo2020 said:
Whats the body coloured square for, a hatch? Can it be ordered without it as it looks horrendous.
Gerry explained that it is a styling feature, to accentuate the strength of the vehicle, being positioned directly above the rear wheel. It also perfectly blocks the sideways vision of rear seat passengers.

For something so carefull styled, it;s unfortunate that it looks like a Moomin.

sennastyl

33 posts

196 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
An absolute embarrassment to the Defender name. It is entirely a piece of junk. cheap plastic everywhere, including the exterior.

GTEYE

2,093 posts

210 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
sennastyl said:
An absolute embarrassment to the Defender name. It is entirely a piece of junk. cheap plastic everywhere, including the exterior.
An interesting statement, with a whiff of troll.

So the plastic that was used in the old Defender was better? Have you actually looked at an old Defender?

Should they have made the new one entirely out of cast iron?



RicksAlfas

13,383 posts

244 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
milesr3 said:
Gerry explained that it is a styling feature, to accentuate the strength of the vehicle, being positioned directly above the rear wheel. It also perfectly blocks the sideways vision of rear seat passengers.
That's the same kind of whacko logic which he used to justify the Disco 5 rear number plate. nuts

lowdrag

12,873 posts

213 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
The staple use of a Land Rover is,well, just what the name says. About as basic as a 2CV, needing few tools to repair on the farm. And that is the point; a Defender was designed for off-road use, not the Kings Road. I can just see a farmer, his boots covered in slurry, climbing aboard this new version - and then hosing it out in the farm yard later on. Not. So once again I guess that Toyota and others will be rubbing their hands and looking forward to a boost in orders.

Cold

15,233 posts

90 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
lowdrag said:
The staple use of a Land Rover is,well, just what the name says. About as basic as a 2CV, needing few tools to repair on the farm. And that is the point; a Defender was designed for off-road use, not the Kings Road. I can just see a farmer, his boots covered in slurry, climbing aboard this new version - and then hosing it out in the farm yard later on. Not. So once again I guess that Toyota and others will be rubbing their hands and looking forward to a boost in orders.
We have a Bingo. Quite early on for a Defender thread too.

Our lines are now closed. You won't be entered into the competition but you may still be charged for the call.

Numeric

1,395 posts

151 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
RicksAlfas said:
milesr3 said:
Gerry explained that it is a styling feature, to accentuate the strength of the vehicle, being positioned directly above the rear wheel. It also perfectly blocks the sideways vision of rear seat passengers.
That's the same kind of whacko logic which he used to justify the Disco 5 rear number plate. nuts
I find the restricted view through some privacy glass can make me feel a little nauseus - I imagine with small children who can't see out this might become a bit of 'Vomit Comet' if that very strange styling feature on the rear wi8ndow can't be deleted?

Looks to me like some strange late addition to cover something up - like a structural area of some sort - used to be common to see such things on the bottom of c-pillars as on the W123 or XJ40 where a little styled cover was placed over a big fat weld line.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 26th February 2020
quotequote all
Cold said:
lowdrag said:
The staple use of a Land Rover is,well, just what the name says. About as basic as a 2CV, needing few tools to repair on the farm. And that is the point; a Defender was designed for off-road use, not the Kings Road. I can just see a farmer, his boots covered in slurry, climbing aboard this new version - and then hosing it out in the farm yard later on. Not. So once again I guess that Toyota and others will be rubbing their hands and looking forward to a boost in orders.
We have a Bingo. Quite early on for a Defender thread too.

Our lines are now closed. You won't be entered into the competition but you may still be charged for the call.
Haha, I'm surprised it took so long to be honest. laugh