RE: New Classic Defender V8 Churchill Edition unveiled
RE: New Classic Defender V8 Churchill Edition unveiled
Wednesday 27th August

New Classic Defender V8 Churchill Edition unveiled

Limited to just ten examples, the car pays tribute to UKE 80 - the Series I Land Rover presented to Winston in 1954


Almost exactly a year ago this week, Land Rover launched the Classic Defender V8 by Works Bespoke, which was less a new model than it was a ‘unique’ commissioning service to create a custom-built car befitting the name. Devotees of the brand will recall that this process was in itself a retread of the manufacturer’s penchant for producing limited-edition Classic Works V8s, only it removed the implication that Land Rover was ever going to stop ‘remaking’ Defenders built between 2012 and 2016. Evidently, they were just too popular. And profitable. 

Well, in case you were wondering if business was slowing, we now have the Classic Defender V8 Churchill Edition to remind us what is possible. Land Rover says its latest Works Bespoke commission is ‘inspired’ by the Series I that was gifted to the great man in 1954 on his 80th birthday - hence the UKE 80 registration - and will be limited to just ten examples. The prices being asked - £232,500 for a 90, £242,500 for a Soft Top and £246,000 for a 110 Station Wagon, all before VAT - suggest that the manufacturer is not struggling for customers for its 405hp restomod.

Of course, eagle-eyed fans will note that the Churchill Edition is not really very much like the 86-inch wheelbase Series I that spent a decade rattling around Chartwell with Winston in a modified passenger seat at all. Because, again, every example of the Churchill Edition is a Defender built between 2012 and 2016, freshly endowed with a 5.0-litre V8 and eight-speed ZF automatic, and equipped with a familiar combination of Eibach coil springs, Bilstein dampers and uprated anti-roll bars that distinguish all Works Bespoke cars. The original UKE 80 would likely have greeted 380lb ft of torque with the same indignation its owner might have expressed at being asked to wear roller skates. 

But if you can see over that modest hump, there is undeniably plenty here to like. As you might expect, the Bronze Green bodywork has been expertly matched to Winston’s car, and (predictably) it looks fabulous on a Defender, as do the 16-inch steelies. You also get a galvanised front bumper with the classic mesh grille, and the single matt black headlight surround is meant to reflect the positioning of the numberplate on the Series I. The latter we could do without, but the UKE 80 decals on the wings look the part. 

As we’d imagine the upgraded interior does in Bridge of Weir Semi-Aniline Bottle Green leather. And if that doesn’t do it for you, the unique clock design - inspired by Pol Roger Sir Winston Churchill champagne, no less - just might. Needless to say, this is all about showing off what Land Rover Classic can do if a customer resolves to do something special with a commission, but the Churchill Edition is a fair reminder that if you can avoid the commemorative plate aesthetic, a decent-looking (and great-sounding) Defender ought to result. 

“The Classic Defender V8 Churchill Edition is a fantastic example of what’s possible when a client’s idea meets Land Rover Classic experts’ craftsmanship and attention to detail,” said Dominic Elms, Managing Director at Jaguar Land Rover Classic. “Our Works Bespoke experts have subtly captured the essence of Winston Churchill’s iconic 1954 Land Rover to create these exclusive limited-edition vehicles, which are now being hand-crafted at our world-class restoration home in the UK.” If that all sounds like your sort of patriotic jam, we’d suggest getting on the blower immediately.


Author
Discussion

Big_Steve

Original Poster:

7 posts

66 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Never understood their appeal.
Ugly cumbersome things with nothing inside them & a five quid interior.

The modern ones however…

bloomen

8,581 posts

175 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
I don't get it either.

I stay at a hotel that uses one to cart punters back and forth.

It's the single most unpleasant vehicle I've been in in living memory.

Dunno what it's special sauce is, but I'm 100% immune.

Zad

12,872 posts

252 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
PH said:
The prices being asked - £232,500 for a 90, £242,500 for a Soft Top and £246,000 for a 110 Station Wagon, all before VAT
Yet another set of cars destined to be parked up in a storage unit and left then.

RustyNissanPrairie

290 posts

11 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Absolutely insane prices........but fair play to JLR if they can sell them for that sort of money.

(ex 110 owner)

Billy_Whizzzz

2,372 posts

159 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Bought mine new in 2014 for £26k plus vat. Still have it. If I could only have one car this would be it, despite the fact that as others have said they are technically rubbish to drive and bits of it astonishingly flimsy and cheap. But, for some strange reason I love it and love driving it, despite owning various other things that drive MUCH better and are MUCH better made.

100SRV

2,273 posts

258 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
These "special editions" are crazier than the love-in for modified 911's.

Really scraping the bottom of the barrel for ideas.

stavr0ss

253 posts

144 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Bought mine new in 2014 for £26k plus vat. Still have it. If I could only have one car this would be it, despite the fact that as others have said they are technically rubbish to drive and bits of it astonishingly flimsy and cheap. But, for some strange reason I love it and love driving it, despite owning various other things that drive MUCH better and are MUCH better made.
I think Neil Clifford has nailed the explanation for this, every really cool car has to be a bit st in some way, its the subjective element that makes love something vs the objectively ‘good all round’ that never gets past like.

My wife loves defenders, old and new, but I don’t get the appeal at all- especially as we’re not remotely rural.

Moss Feen

259 posts

180 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
You lost me at £200k+ for a Defender

GianiCakes

482 posts

89 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Billy_Whizzzz said:
Bought mine new in 2014 for £26k plus vat. Still have it. If I could only have one car this would be it, despite the fact that as others have said they are technically rubbish to drive and bits of it astonishingly flimsy and cheap. But, for some strange reason I love it and love driving it, despite owning various other things that drive MUCH better and are MUCH better made.
I’m immune to the sauce of the old Defenders as well, but I do like that one. Much more appealing than a 200k special edition.

Jon_S_Rally

3,985 posts

104 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Overall, it looks quite good, though the black headlight surround does make it look like it's had an accident, so I couldn't put up with that.

stavr0ss said:
I think Neil Clifford has nailed the explanation for this, every really cool car has to be a bit st in some way, its the subjective element that makes love something vs the objectively ‘good all round’ that never gets past like.

My wife loves defenders, old and new, but I don’t get the appeal at all- especially as we’re not remotely rural.
There is definitely something in that. How likeable a car is is rarely a reflection of how objectively good it is. It's that very logic that probably explains why a lot of petrolheads struggle with EVs. If we're honest, they are very good at doing what a car needs to do, but they are (generally speaking) pretty clinical and thus not very interesting as a result. Some of my most memorable and enjoyable driving experiences have been in some of the most objectively terrible cars I've driven.

turbomoggie

275 posts

120 months

Tuesday 26th August
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The Defender is an icon of British design, so I like it. But the price is extremely high.

Vee12V

1,393 posts

176 months

Tuesday 26th August
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I think it's a very cool SE but not at those prices. Just laughable.

LightweightLouisDanvers

2,574 posts

59 months

Tuesday 26th August
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Love it.
90" canvas top for me please...... but the price! nono

valiant

12,505 posts

176 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
There’s a lot of love for the old Defender and it does look great and I’m sure it’s been put together far far better than one the LR produced originally but c’mon, that price is hard to take for a mere mortal but I’m sure they’ve done their sums and know their market but as someone said, this will rarely see a a display stand on a grassy field let alone it’s natural habitat of being in six inches deep in mud.

BigChiefmuffinAgain

1,422 posts

114 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
Take an old rubbish car ( to drive on the road ), tart it up and you get an overpriced old rubbish car.

Why people pay this sort of money for these sort of things ( assuming that somewhere in this world there are still people mad enough to do so ) is one of the greater mysteries in the world....

J4CKO

44,692 posts

216 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
valiant said:
There’s a lot of love for the old Defender and it does look great and I’m sure it’s been put together far far better than one the LR produced originally but c’mon, that price is hard to take for a mere mortal but I’m sure they’ve done their sums and know their market but as someone said, this will rarely see a a display stand on a grassy field let alone it’s natural habitat of being in six inches deep in mud.
You missed a trick, should have said,

"Never in the field"

fantheman80

2,081 posts

65 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
You missed a trick, should have said,

"Never in the field"
clap

I was gonna say if it doesnt say " we will fight them on the beaches" as the start up bong, Id be walking out the showroom

DonkeyApple

63,463 posts

185 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
What's interesting is that everyone in the market knows how much a resto of a 2012-16 Defender costs, how much the AJ engine install costs and how much the little trim and handling bits cost. None of this stuff is unique to JLR, they've just gone around the existing market learning how to do it. The point that is interesting is that we know JLR can add a big premium to the V8 resto as it comes out branded and the brand is LR but it's a new money and typically overseas money at that point so how many of those people will want the association with some crazy old fan of colonial oppression and war mongering?

We, as Brits see Churchill who because of all his ghastly faults became the right man for the right job for a brief moment in time and as a result a single individual who changed history, arguably for the better. But outside of these Isles in the parts of the world where money has been flowing freely, if he is seen as anything then it is as a lunatic and butcher.

So I can only surmise that all ten are aimed very squarely at the United States? That's the only market I can think of that has people drowning in money but who'd see Winnie in the same light as a Brit?

fflump

2,468 posts

54 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
It’s nicely executed outside setting aside the black headlight surround but there’s only so much you can do with the design. The interior is not great-is that the same cheap steering wheel and instrument cluster from these late model Defenders? All far too green as well. I know it’s a cliche but needs a tan interior or brown with tweed or herringbone fabric. Overall it’s very hard to tell where the money has gone

Bangbox

6 posts

136 months

Tuesday 26th August
quotequote all
I can’t unsee those door handles