RE: New Twenty Edition salutes Range Rover Sport
RE: New Twenty Edition salutes Range Rover Sport
Tuesday 14th April

New Twenty Edition salutes Range Rover Sport

Making the Range Rover sporty was one of Land Rover's better ideas - a new special edition pays tribute


They say better late than not at all. So here, 21 years after the first Range Rover Sports hit the road, is the Range Rover Sport Twenty Edition, designed to celebrate ‘two decades of sporting luxury with attitude’. In much the same way that it was hard to imagine much remotely sporty in the Land Rover lineup prior to 2005, these days it’s impossible to think of the company without a Sport. Aside from Defender, it’s arguably the core product, and obviously crucial to the 'Range Rover' bit of JLR's 'House of Brands' strategy. Moreover, in SV form, it's pretty extraordinary to drive, too. 

Land Rover may have come to the idea a bit later than BMW and Porsche - it even concedes that the car was ‘born from the realisation that the market was ready for more dynamic, performance orientated SUV’ (aka boatloads of X5s and Cayennes had been sold), but it’s more than made up for lost time in the 21 years since. Indeed, the Sport is credited with marking a ‘defining shift’ for Range Rover; surely the Evoque and Velar wouldn’t have happened if the Sport hadn’t been such a runaway success. 

The Twenty Edition fully leans into Sport heritage with its cost-option Sanguinello Orange paint; the original, incredible Range Stormer concept was of course orange - named ‘Oh!Range’ if the internet is to be believed - and the first Launch Edition was offered in Vesuvius Orange. The Twenty couldn’t be anything but orange, really, though white and black are offered if you really have to. Those that do go for the wrong colours will have ‘TWENTY’ on the centre console, treadplates, and etched into the front wing vents as identifiers of the special status. The interior features seats just like those in the SV, with forged carbon veneers as well. A black pack and a set of 23s are also standard fit, because no Range Rover Sport would be complete without them. (Remember how mad the wheels looked on that Stormer concept? They were 22-inch diameter…)

All Twenty Editions are P550e spec, meaning a double act of the 3.0-litre straight-six with a 142hp electric motor, the latter supplied by a 38.2kWh battery. So while you can’t expect 550hp, 18g/km and 71 miles of EV range all at the same time, they are the theoretical (quite impressive) maximums. Or, if you really want to mark 20-odd years of very orange Range Rover Sports with a supercharged V8 (as tradition must surely dictate), do the classifieds have the SVR for you…   

Range Rover’s Global MD Martin Limpert said of the Twenty: “Range Rover Sport has continually pushed the boundaries since the Stormer concept was first revealed. Over two decades it has proven itself as a highly capable luxury SUV with sports-car DNA and the Twenty Edition is the perfect celebration of its enduring legacy. This limited edition adds to that momentum, capturing an exciting moment in a journey that’s far from finished for Range Rover Sport.”

Your guess is as good as ours as to where that journey goes next, given delays to the Range Rover Electric and the ongoing, unstoppable popularity of the Defender. The Range Rover Sport Twenty Edition goes on sale in August, priced from £115,790.


 

Author
Discussion

nismo48

Original Poster:

6,431 posts

231 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Loving the silver wheels !! The rest of it ain't bad either.

Andy86GT

905 posts

89 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Land Rover have really nailed their styling, only dropping the ball with the big Discovery (bring back the series 4). Having said that, most Disco customers are migrating to Defender which is also a design icon.

valiant

13,483 posts

184 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
If they lost the privacy glass it would look better still.

The Sport can look pretty classy if you spec it right but unfortunately most prefer the black wheels on black paint with max privacy glass which just leans into the stereotype.

£115k as well? Didn't realise they were that expensive, even for a limited edition (which will add nothing to it's value in 10 years time).

griffsomething

375 posts

185 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
JLR finally found a colour other than black in the factory?!! Blimey, it’s been a while.

GTEYE

2,408 posts

234 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
What is actually different, other than the colour and badges?

Magikarp

1,603 posts

72 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Needs 26” wheels. Everyday folk won’t be able to tell the difference otherwise, and if that’s the case, what’s the point?

GreatScott2016

2,303 posts

112 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
nismo48 said:
Loving the silver wheels !! The rest of it ain't bad either.
Agreed. That reddish colour plus a black interior and silver wheels would be the pick for me. Lovely combo smile

pb8g09

3,069 posts

93 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
No picture of the rear, which feels significant given most of us will be fixated on it as the owner road captain’s the outside lane.

RedLightGreenLight

159 posts

48 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
They should spend more of their efforts improving their quality and reliability reputation…. Team up with Toyota for their engines etc

CH80

362 posts

21 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
I prefer the look of the old generation Sport, both inside and out. This remains bland to look at from the outside-could be any brand - and inside? The quality of the interior dropped significantly.

cayman-black

13,253 posts

240 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
In will take that orange SVR, Thank you,

vimfuegoturbo

33 posts

189 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Each to their own and all that, but I still don’t see the appeal of this kind of car. I am clearly in a minority. Having said all that if I ever choose to buy a nightclub or deal in dubious ‘recreational’ substances then an orange one of these would surely be my ‘go to’!

SE2

336 posts

160 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
It's a shame it's not the original Vesuvius Orange, but not half as much a shame that they don't fit the split-fold tailgate to the Sport.

My boss has a facelifted first generation currently, and his addition of roof bars makes me like it rather a lot, and such vehicles aren't really my thing.

GTRene

21,214 posts

248 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
looks slick.

fflump

3,116 posts

62 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Nice looking other than the rear, which is an affliction the current FFRR suffers from also IMO.

disco666

558 posts

170 months

Wednesday 15th April
quotequote all
Twenty years and they still haven't found a way to hide the iPad.