RE: Land Rover Discovery Sport P250 MHEV | Driven

RE: Land Rover Discovery Sport P250 MHEV | Driven

Author
Discussion

Digsy

104 posts

214 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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Drekly said:
w824gb3 said:
The article is wrong. This facelift Disco sport is still on the same underpinnings as the current model which was modified Freelander 2, which itself can be traced back to the 2007 Mondeo.
It looks like Autocar have got it wrong as well
"You see, in addition to giving the Discovery Sport a subtly tweaked exterior and a new interior that looks and feels far more Range Rover-like than ever before, Land Rover has completely replaced the architecture upon which it’s based. Originally, this was a fairly heavily reengineered version of the LR-MS platform that underpinned the first-generation Range Rover Evoque, but this has now been done away with and replaced by Land Rover’s latest Premium Transverse Architecture (PTA) - the same platform that, funnily enough, also underpins the second-generation Evoque."
Auto Express too...

https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/land-rover/discovery...

Equus

16,980 posts

102 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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The quoted fuel economy figures sound unexceptional? I get that sort of economy from my FFRR TDV8, albeit in almost exclusively extra-urban use.

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

235 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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So is the Sport the stripped out track version? Or is it for people who like to play darts on a weekend?

modeller

445 posts

167 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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garypotter said:
Still the ugliest rear end in the SUV 4x4 market
Looks better than a Macan

JonnyVTEC

3,006 posts

176 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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SidewaysSi said:
So is the Sport the stripped out track version? Or is it for people who like to play darts on a weekend?
Take a kids 5 a side team to a game.

JimexPL

1,445 posts

213 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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FWDRacer said:
Preconceptions means you are missing out on a brilliant (and for LR) affordable family do-all vehicle. No hot hatch but they steer confidently, so can be hustled along and they ride very well. They tow brilliantly. Breadth of capability is the key. You wouldn't even tow a piffling trailer tent with an X3.
Absolutely. If you need a relatively compact seve seat family vehicle that’s a satisfying drive and pleasant to be in, then this is still in a class of one, five years after launch.

scottydoesntknow

860 posts

58 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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Clearly in a minority but I think it's a good looking car.

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

98 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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Meh. Or is Mhev the word the cool kids use to express their indifference nowadays?

unpc

2,837 posts

214 months

Friday 13th September 2019
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Yeah the Mrs has one of these in petrol form. 250bhp I think and it's a great steer for a biggish bus. Effortless cruiser and pretty economical for what it is.

SidewaysSi

10,742 posts

235 months

Friday 13th September 2019
quotequote all
JonnyVTEC said:
SidewaysSi said:
So is the Sport the stripped out track version? Or is it for people who like to play darts on a weekend?
Take a kids 5 a side team to a game.
Very True. Or something to take to a swingers party.

CocoPops

463 posts

232 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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I’ve got one on order, due November.
Went for the D240 R-Dynamic HSE.

For me, it’s the 7 seats in a car that’s only a foot longer than my Golf GTI.

DoubleByte

1,254 posts

267 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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w824gb3 said:
The article is wrong. This facelift Disco sport is still on the same underpinnings as the current model which was modified Freelander 2, which itself can be traced back to the 2007 Mondeo.
Sooooo, tell us, if we put a new disco sport and a Mondeo up on ramps what exactly would we recognise on both????

w824gb3

257 posts

223 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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Not much. But if you put a 2020 ds on ramps next to a 2015 you'd be struggling to spot the difference. A new acronym and a few mods doesn't get away from the fact this is still the same steel transverse engine platform as the last one which harks back to Ford days. Im not saying it's a bad thing i love ours. But the rest of JLR products (excl Evoque and Epace) are running on much more modern alloy platforms. It's probably because they can't afford to retool Halewood.

ObSceney

103 posts

152 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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I like it. The wife recently swapped her '66 Disco Sport HSE for the new Evoque much to my disappointment. The 5+2 seats worked well for us and the ability to load 3 suitcases with bags on top and still carry 5 passengers made it a great family car.

Only disappointing aspects were the looks and tech which they've improved.

JonnyVTEC

3,006 posts

176 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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w824gb3 said:
Not much. But if you put a 2020 ds on ramps next to a 2015 you'd be struggling to spot the difference. A new acronym and a few mods doesn't get away from the fact this is still the same steel transverse engine platform as the last one which harks back to Ford days.
Simply not true.

JxJ Jr.

652 posts

71 months

Saturday 14th September 2019
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JonnyVTEC said:
w824gb3 said:
Not much. But if you put a 2020 ds on ramps next to a 2015 you'd be struggling to spot the difference. A new acronym and a few mods doesn't get away from the fact this is still the same steel transverse engine platform as the last one which harks back to Ford days.
Simply not true.
https://www.autoexpress.co.uk/land-rover/range-rover-evoque

"The latest Range Rover Evoque is based on Land Rover’s Premium Transverse Architecture (PTA), a heavily modified version of the outgoing car’s D8 platform."

Alex P

180 posts

129 months

Tuesday 17th September 2019
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I think this is the most honest vehicle in the whole JLR line-up and, if the roads near me are anything to go by, a very popular one too! It is also good value compared with the rest of the Landrover stable.

This new version seems to address the slight shortcomings with the old one. I think of it as a modern Freelander/LR2, though clearly a bit bigger than the Mk1 and thankfully a world away from it in terms of quality/driving dynamics etc.

As Jaguar, in their wisdom, decided not to offer an XE estate (XF too long/expensive) then a lower spec petrol version may be on the cards as the main family car once nursery fees are no longer a major expense.