RE: Land Rover Defender OCTA | PH Favourite Cars 2025
RE: Land Rover Defender OCTA | PH Favourite Cars 2025
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Land Rover Defender OCTA | PH Favourite Cars 2025

A road-going Dakar racer with a 635hp V8? How could this not make the cut?


Nothing makes you as aware of what you’re driving quite like a Land Rover Defender OCTA. Obviously, a regular Defender dwarfs practically anything on the road bar double-decker buses and oil tankers, but the OCTA’s beefier arches, knobbly tyres and towering suspension are enough to make the standard model appear dainty. Then there’s the matte bronze colour scheme with matte black accents specced on this one, clearly for maximum intimidation. From the moment you set eyes on it to the press of the start button, you’re well aware that the drive you’re about to make will be anything but normal.

That becomes doubly apparent the moment you come across a road lined with parked cars or, heaven forbid, a narrow street through a sleepy village. Being only a smidgen narrower than a Challenger 3 tank, you’ll find zero sympathy from other road users when squeezing past them on any lane that’s barely wide enough for two. And it’s not just people in other cars, either. Having stopped in a car park to grab some of the snaps that accompany this write-up, I was swiftly accosted by a disgruntled rambler who’d become enraged by how I’d parked the car for the shot. Explaining that we’d only be in the empty car park for five minutes to get a few photographs only angered them further, and they left in quite a huff. Aside from a G63 or perhaps the most garish Lamborghini Urus, it’s hard to imagine any other car that could incite such a hysterical reaction.

But you know what? I couldn’t care less. Perhaps the OCTA’s brashness has rubbed off on me, or perhaps tearing about in it is just too much fun. Granted, there is an electrical element to OCTA’s powertrain, with a 48-volt starter motor providing the mildest of hybrid assistance, but it’s otherwise up to the supercharged 4.4-litre twin-turbo V8 up front to deliver the bulk of the 635hp and 553lb ft of torque across both axles. No Defender has ever had so much grunt, says Land Rover, at least from the factory. To back that claim up, the OCTA can propel all 2,585kg of its bulk from 0 to 62mph in four seconds flat, while Land Rover’s had to cap the top speed at 155mph (with road tyres on), because who knows what would happen if it were left completely unshackled.  

More impressive is that those numbers actually translate into real-world performance. With all that weight, it’s remarkable how responsive and on its toes the OCTA feels. The BMW-sourced V8 may not be as characterful as JLR’s old supercharged 5.0-litre unit, but boy is it effective. Not in the way that a Range Rover V8 rapidly gathers pace without anyone really noticing, it’s proper pin you to the back of your seat-style performance. Coupled with that is a much faster steering ratio, resulting in a keener front axle despite the specially developed Goodyear off-road tyres fitted to our test car. That all means it’s surprisingly nimble and adjustable, and it’ll comfortably throw its weight about on a twisty road without hurling you around the cabin like a rag-doll.

Of course, you’ll need to engage OCTA mode, denoted by a black diamond button at the base of the steering wheel, to experience this frenzied state. It’s the first time a Defender has been fitted with a proper performance mode, says Land Rover, and activating it will send up to 85 per cent of the power to the rear axle, slacken off the traction control, sharpen up the throttle response and amplify the exhaust note. As for the suspension, each corner gets air springs with semi-active dampers, with the Range Rover Sport SV’s 6D Dynamics system replacing the standard car’s anti-roll bars that hydraulically adjust the ride and height depending on the conditions. It’ll still ever so slightly pitch and lean in the corners and under hard acceleration, especially if you tick the off-road tyre box, but the way the suspension system keeps in check the immense heft it has to manage, with all the forces it has to deal with, is frankly astonishing.

Don’t be fooled into thinking the OCTA and its newly developed performance setting are for track use in the traditional sense. Think of it more as a road-going Dakar car, which is essentially what it is given its maker is entering a stripped-out and more purposeful version of the OCTA in the upcoming rally. So when you press and hold the black diamond button on the steering wheel, you get performance settings that are tailor-made for the rough stuff. That includes an off-road optimised launch control and a special ABS setting for better braking performance on loose surfaces. You can obviously jack the suspension up to wade through water, various configurations for the beefed-up diffs and a bunch of terrain modes for those times when powering out isn’t an option. 

Most of these are accessed through physical buttons and dials on the dash, all of which are big and chunky enough to operate with a set of gloves on (be it racing or of the winter explorer kind). Otherwise, it’s the usual Defender mix of comfort and luxury, so much so that you feel completely isolated from the outside world. Perfect for an arctic expedition or desert slog. All models come in 110 form, and the options list is remarkably small. The Petra Copper metallic paintwork on our car is among them. It’s a no-cost option by itself, although if you want the matte finish, it’ll set you back £4,500. Sounds normal, right? Well, you’re not actually paying for the car to be painted with a matte finish. Instead, Land Rover wraps the car in a matte protective film, which keeps the paintwork in top condition and ‘heals’ itself when exposed long enough to sunlight. That makes a lot of sense for a car built for tearing up gravel tracks, but it does look a little bodged given that you can see the difference in finish between the matte door skin and metallic sill.

Anyway, how many OCTAs will actually end up going properly off-road? Not too many, I suspect. That’s not a dig at its owners, it’s just that this is a performance version of a car that, while capable of great things, rarely sees much off-road action bar the odd muddy bit of grass and the occasional sprinkling of snow. Let’s not forget it’s £148,045, after all. Nevertheless, like the standard Defender, it’s immensely versatile. Whack it into normal mode and it feels like a regular Defender V8, albeit with better body control. It’s quiet (perhaps a little too quiet for my liking), refined and as effortless to manoeuvre as any Range Rover. Admittedly, those off-road tyres generate a fair bit of road noise and it does need small corrections to keep it pointing straight and true, all things that would be eliminated by choosing road rubber - but where’s the fun in that?

Nope, you buy an OCTA not because it’s the most capable Defender ever made, but because there simply isn’t anything else quite like it. I, and many others, find the vast majority of massive SUVs with equally massive engines repulsive. They’re excessive, wasteful and typically rubbish at being a performance car in the traditional sense. The OCTA, however, is an exception. It’s not trying to be something it isn’t, instead embracing its off-roader roots and amplifying it with a stonking V8 and chassis wizardry that somehow prevents it from toppling over. Novel experiences are hard to come by these days, but the OCTA is the first car in years where I’ve actually wanted to muck about with all the different drive modes, like you would a new toy on Christmas Day. A proper misfit, then - and therefore a shot in the arm for a new car market woefully short of V8-powered mavericks. 


SPECIFICATION | LAND ROVER DEFENDER OCTA 

Engine: 4,395cc V8, twin-turbocharged
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 635@5,855rpm-7,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 553@1,800rpm-5,855rpm (590 with launch control)
0-62mph: 4.0 seconds
Top speed: 155mph (limited)
Weight: 2,585kg
MPG: 21.4
CO2: 298g/km
Price: £148,045 

Honourable mention | BMW M3 CS Touring (G81)

The OCTA ultimately got the nod for this year because it was so refreshingly different to everything else I’d driven. However, the car I’d actually like to have on my driveway and use everyday would be the new BMW M3 CS Touring. Not least because the Defender is a thirsty so-and-so, but mostly because the CS Touring is just so damn hard to find fault with. Take the changes at face value and you’d be fooled into thinking BMW has barely done anything. The dampers have been upgraded, the geometry tweaked, the steering recalibrated and the DSC fine-tuned. It’s also 15kg lighter courtesy of some carbon-backed bucked seats. But, as has been the case with M-branded specials that came before it, the CS Touring feels better in almost every department compared to the standard car. It’s sharper, more communicative and while naturally firmer, it’s not discerningly less comfortable than the Competition. It is, however, £30k more than the Comp, and BMW is making them in such tiny numbers that they’ve probably all sold by now. Shame, because it’s damn near the perfect M car. 

Author
Discussion

el romeral

Original Poster:

1,854 posts

157 months

Nice alternative to a G63. Launch control in a Defender is hilarious!

Angelo1985

645 posts

46 months

I’d be happy with the humble diesel version. But damn, I would. Haters gonna hate.

wistec1

706 posts

61 months

Built to conquer the world but it's so ostentatious that the risk of alloy wheel scuffing alone would probably be enough to stop most owners going near anything that resembles the ruff stuff.

But you don't buy one for that so it becomes £148k with ownership compromises which is ok for some just not my idea of money well spent.

I get it though but I'd opt for a nice spec D300 with some steels fitted.






fantheman80

2,274 posts

69 months

Really cool, but in my neck of the urban woods, the defender in general with their Kahn style body addenda and temu vossen wheels has become the turkey teeth and driveway remodlers chariot of choice, and driven like they are on a Dakar stage.

Motormouth88

683 posts

80 months

Saw one in the flesh last week for the first time, had such great presence and made me very much want one, shame I’m incredibly poor

Buster73

5,462 posts

173 months

Over 80 new available on autotrader some with discounts of £8k

nismo48

5,999 posts

227 months

Motormouth88 said:
Saw one in the flesh last week for the first time, had such great presence and made me very much want one, shame I m incredibly poor
With you but a windfall beckons wink

Bernt Tuakrisp

229 posts

220 months

wistec1 said:
Built to conquer the world but it's so ostentatious that the risk of alloy wheel scuffing alone would probably be enough to stop most owners going near anything that resembles the ruff stuff.

But you don't buy one for that so it becomes £148k with ownership compromises which is ok for some just not my idea of money well spent.

I get it though but I'd opt for a nice spec D300 with some steels fitted.

The D300 is now a D350, I've had one for a year and its been an absolute pleasure, particularly navigating the muddy pot holed single lane roads where we live. 0.60 in 6 seconds is plenty in a Defender, but I'd love a go in an Octa.

GreatScott2016

2,129 posts

108 months

I find it odd when folk talk about power and acceleration (and launch control hehe) in a Defender. A decent amount of torque, yes, but everything else is totally unnecessary, imho smile.

Coley88

2,964 posts

211 months

I’m testing driving one tomorrow with the view of selling my Cayenne.


Mercutio

296 posts

182 months

I agree strongly with an earlier comment -

Exciting proposition on paper, but sadly this car tends to be driven by the kind of people I genuinely try to avoid at any cost.

Black packs, black wheels, driven at high speed down side roads when cars are parked on the left and they should give way. Parked inconsiderately in car parks, owner doesn't give a st as they think they're better than you.

Avoid.




LRDefender

374 posts

28 months

GreatScott2016 said:
I find it odd when folk talk about power and acceleration (and launch control hehe) in a Defender. A decent amount of torque, yes, but everything else is totally unnecessary, imho smile.
You do know this is a motoring forum, right?

A marvellous machine, I'm very tempted by these.....

smilo996

3,512 posts

190 months

or a Grenadier🤣. Be a hoot if they did a SWB.

Sulphur Man

274 posts

153 months

LRDefender said:
You do know this is a motoring forum, right?

A marvellous machine, I'm very tempted by these.....
Actually it's a performance car motoring forum, right? And that's why this car is so divisive.

The writer winds up his copy with the below....

"I, and many others, find the vast majority of massive SUVs with equally massive engines repulsive"

.... but fails to adequately explain why the Octa is so different, even likening it to a Challenger Tank earlier in the piece.

Each to their own, and god knows JLR needs some wins after another year of techology security calamities, but absolutely not for me.

Ray_Aber

715 posts

296 months

I'd echo the comment below by Mr Sulphur. Really not my thing, and rather pointless to me. Going fast is best done in a sports car. Going offroad is best done in a standard Defender. I'm not impressed by it, but that's just me.

J4CKO

45,371 posts

220 months

fantheman80 said:
Really cool, but in my neck of the urban woods, the defender in general with their Kahn style body addenda and temu vossen wheels has become the turkey teeth and driveway remodlers chariot of choice, and driven like they are on a Dakar stage.
Yeah, I know what you mean, had one launch out of a shopping area the other day seemingly without looking and the preceded to drive really quite fast through a 30 at school chucking out time.

But, JLR nailed it with this, they are everywhere and still look great, look best as someone mentioned on steels without the child’s lunchbox on the side window or any of the Urban type stuff, they are good at what they do but I prefer the utilitarian look. The D350 sounds. Good compromise as most of us can’t afford 148 grand, great there is a G class competitor, be interesting to see a side by side test.


Firebobby

897 posts

59 months

£4.5k for a matt finish? DIL just had her p400 110 Chelsea truck wrapped in matt for £2k!

Cups Renault

197 posts

221 months

Peak wkpanza. Get it in black with the vanity case at the rear and we are living the midlife crisis, chintzy dream.

Cotswolds is starting an appeal to send the buggers back....up the m40.

GreatScott2016

2,129 posts

108 months

Sulphur Man said:
LRDefender said:
You do know this is a motoring forum, right?

A marvellous machine, I'm very tempted by these.....
Actually it's a performance car motoring forum, right? And that's why this car is so divisive.

The writer winds up his copy with the below....

"I, and many others, find the vast majority of massive SUVs with equally massive engines repulsive"

.... but fails to adequately explain why the Octa is so different, even likening it to a Challenger Tank earlier in the piece.

Each to their own, and god knows JLR needs some wins after another year of techology security calamities, but absolutely not for me.
Excellent responsethumbup

findtomdotcom

818 posts

260 months

I wrote a bit on my experience moving from a V8 Defender to an OCTA in the forums. The car is just good fun, and that is the point that might be being missed by a few of the haters above. I'm actually a bit surprised more people haven't written the usually "I hate SUVs" captions to be fair, there are some very shouty OCTA specs available and I wonder if this drives some of the comments? I actually dislike the Kahn and Urban look too, (just not my thing, but I get lots of people like that and thats cool). The OCTA can be a bit spec sensitive as you can buy one with a matte wrap and in gold.... Oh and add lots of carbon, white seats and massive wheels. I think this is the footballer/drug dealer spec and understandably it's a bit in your face, but I think that might be the point.

However, you can also buy one without any carbon and gold and option the fantastic smaller 20" wheels. Other than the wide arches, it's a less shouty car and I think better for it. But again the point is, it is a really fun car to own and drive, (especially off-road and under the speed limit). Now that there are few available for £130k/£125k, I think they might be the best mad SUV you can buy right now and almost good value, (that might be a stretch).

Please, do drive one, they really are fun and that's ok right?