RE: Jaguar F-Type rally car: Driven

RE: Jaguar F-Type rally car: Driven

Friday 15th February 2019

2020 Jaguar F-Type rally car | UK Review

We've had F-Types for the street, and F-Types for the track - now time for the stage!



In a world of static display one-offs and concepts that'll never see the light of day for Jaguar to go ahead with something as daft as the F-Type rally car should be applauded. The two that it has made won't compete and won't be sold. Ostensibly they were created to mark 70 years of Jaguar sports cars in 2018 and, more specifically, to pay homage to 'NUB 120', the iconic Jaguar XK120 that was rallied in the early 1950s. Indeed the car was campaigned by Ian and Pat Appleyard, the latter William Lyons' daughter, giving the project further legitimacy - all the more so with a pair of RAC victories to their name in the car.

But let's not get carried away; the F-Type is plainly not a competition model, so cast aside any fantasies now of Jaguars returning to the world's rally stages. Instead it's a bit of fun - goodness knows we all need a bit of that sometimes - a chance for engineers to work together on something that raises a smile without moving an inch. Imagine how entertaining, then, it would be to drive...

Seeing an F-Type in rally costume feels a bit like seeing your Granddad in a triathlon suit; clearly a lot of money has been spent on sporting equipment, but it also exposes more of what was there originally. That's hardly a bad thing though, function having certainly taken the place of form for this F-Type - which hasn't always felt like the case.


Those Braid wheels are said to be super strong yet are just 16-inch in diameter - most 2.0-litre F-Types on the road will be using 19s - and the ride height is raised 40mm over standard. Behind are 295mm AP Racing brakes with uprated calipers, and bespoke, handbuilt, remote reservoir Exe-TC dampers lurking further behind. While the engine and gearbox are carried over from a regular P300 F-Type, there is now the limited-slip diff and final drive from a V6 S. Oh yeah, and a hydraulic handbrake. Eligible for competition or not, this is still a rally car...

Our drive takes place at Jaguar's Fen End test facility, on a tight, testing 'stage' that features what appears to be a beach of mud. There are autotest-style fidgety chicanes and precious little run off. One previous attendee has already discovered that, apparently; best not make it two, eh?

Now while Jaguar isn't going to sell anybody an F-Type rally car anytime soon, there really are bits from this car that could make for an interesting roadgoing project. The carbon doorcards from a GT4 car would be woefully impractical, but they do look great, and whatever has been done to the exhaust has given the Ingenium engine the voice of a Group A special - not tuneful especially, but the kind of fierce, evocative bark best enjoyed through a helmet. Or a bobble hat. It's great.


Hopefully it should come as no surprise to find that the F-Type rally car is tremendous fun to drive. Now, of course, thousands of pounds of motorsport equipment thrown at it will have contributed, but there's also a tangible, and welcome, impression of this very much still driving like a relative of the road car. The combination of the four-cylinder engine with a locking diff is surely the ideal for a sweet F-Type: there's the fleet-footedness, agility and poise that the 2.0-litre car has been praised for, now allied to the proper traction and throttle adjustability the LSD provides.

It feels - and this is meant entirely as a compliment - like an old rally car to drive. Or certainly how an old rally car looks to drive. Those (presumably very expensive) dampers are paired with springs 40 per cent softer than the road car, with a rate of 60N/mm. What that means dynamically is that the car is almost spookily soft yet always retains the exquisite compliance, on this small route at least, that only competition cars ever possess. The nose pitches under brakes but never dives ungainly; a nudge of the wheel towards the corner darts the car in, with the unweighted rear only too willing to help out and then it's steer-by-pedal. On a slippery surface that famed F-Type balance and friendliness is only too happy to oblige.

Because there's not huge power (or at least not relative to the weight), it feels that the quickest approach is - you've guessed it - like an old rally car, with momentum, and therefore oversteer, coming most naturally as opposed to anything more measured. There is grip, far more than you'd credit an off-road F-Type with, but the car slides so benignly - and appears not to be squandering much forward motion in doing so - that it's hard to resist.


Even at fairly low speed, those dampers shine through in the dynamic make up, and make you realise just how far road cars are from thecompetition variants. The car is supple almost to the point of being squidgy, with seemingly impossible spring travel for a car so low, yet utterly unflustered regardless of the surface. Which, of course, frees the driver to endlessly prod at its limits. On a proper gravel stage it must be superb.

Alas, that won't happen for this car given its purely promotional existence. To homologate an F-Type for something as niche as R-GT, particularly given cars like the Cayman (with its more favourable layout) are already available, doesn't really seem sensible in the current climate. But the F-Type rally car has proven itself as hilarious as the concept sounds, and also stretched the idea of what's possible with a four-cylinder Jaguar sports car. If nothing else, it does suggest that something for the road in the Porsche 718 T style, a little noisier and a little naughtier, with the diff fitted as standard, would be really rather good.


SPECIFICATION - JAGUAR F-TYPE P300
Engine:
1,997cc, four-cylinder turbocharged
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 300@5,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 295@1,500rpm
0-62mph: 5.7secs
Top speed: 155mph
Weight: 'From 1,545kg'
MPG: 39.2 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 163g/km
Price: N/A (all spec for roadgoing Convertible)










 

Author
Discussion

evo2073

Original Poster:

28 posts

139 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
A convertible rally car lol clap

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

97 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Haha, must be fun to remove the mud after a good run. They really should have used the coupe as base. Seems like great fun nonetheless.

P.s. Wish that rally inspired suspension was also more of thing on special road versions.

untakenname

4,969 posts

192 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
It's more style over substance, over 1.5 tonnes for a stripped out rally car....

BFleming

3,604 posts

143 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Nice showcase of what JLR can do. Now, show us that interior after its mudbath!


Ultrafunkula

997 posts

105 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
First the Porsche GT4 rally car and now this... are they trying to make rally great again?

Hitch

6,106 posts

194 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
I don't get it. They should have used the Coupe and gone Dakar-style: stripped the interior, added blistered arches, spare wheel in the rear hatch, raised the height and left the nose higher than the rear, big yellow tinted spotlights across the grill... that would have been epic.



Edited by Hitch on Thursday 14th February 10:12

Greg the Fish

1,410 posts

66 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Looks fun!

ZX10R NIN

27,594 posts

125 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Rather than pushing for hybrids & Fiesta's with more wings than you can shake a stick at, they should be pushing these types of cars who wouldn't want to see a Vantage/Evora/Cayman/RCF/GranTurismo/F Type tearing around Corsica/Wales/Monte Carlo & then add the various exhaust notes.

Jean Todt if you really want to make rallying great again go down the line of the latter rather than the former.

JMF894

5,501 posts

155 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
A good giggle but no more than that

1.5t scratchchin

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

97 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Hitch said:
I don't get it. They should have used the Coupe and gone Dakar-style: stripped the interior, added blistered arches, spare wheel in the rear hatch, raised the height and left the nose higher than the rear, big yellow tinted spotlights across the grill... that would have been epic.
ZX10R NIN said:
Rather than pushing for hybrids & Fiesta's with more wings than you can shake a stick at, they should be pushing these types of cars who wouldn't want to see a Vantage/Evora/Cayman/RCF/GranTurismo/F Type tearing around Corsica/Wales/Monte Carlo & then add the various exhaust notes. Jean Todt if you really want to make rallying great again go down the line of the latter rather than the former.
Amen to above.

Nerdherder

1,773 posts

97 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
untakenname said:
It's more style over substance, over 1.5 tonnes for a stripped out rally car....
Rally version of the Alpine A110 please!

vz-r_dave

3,469 posts

218 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Ultrafunkula said:
First the Porsche GT4 rally car and now this... are they trying to make rally great again?
Doesnt seem so, the Porsche can actually be used in competition, this is a just a PR stunt.

TWPC

842 posts

161 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
What a fantastic thing!
Love the looks and especially the small wheel/high profile tyre/raised suspension combo.

Echoing the comment above - bring on the Alpine A110 Rallye...

st4

1,359 posts

133 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
I adore that biggrin

andy97

4,703 posts

222 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
GT rally cars over 3 litres are now allowed on UK rallies due to a rule change in Jan of this year. the MSVR/ Motorsport News Circuit rally Championship now has a class for Rally GT. It would be good if this wasn't just a PR stunt - JLR should should build more and rally them in the MSVR/MN Circuit Rally Championship and on closed road events such as the Isle of Man, the Jin Clark in Scotland (when it returns) and the Clacton Rally.

bakerstreet

4,763 posts

165 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
Jaguar looking rather desperate these days. We don't have any new cars coming that are noteworthy, so we will tart up what we have and turn it into something that it was never designed to be and also something you can't buy.

I like Jaguar as a brand, but they really do need a shot in arm. I just don't know what that shot is.


MX6

5,983 posts

213 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
untakenname said:
It's more style over substance, over 1.5 tonnes for a stripped out rally car....
It does look fun and I don't to be too negative on this, but I agree it does appear to be a style over substance effort to be fair.

Over 1.5 tonnes yes, but that's because it doesn't appear to be very stripped out at all, it looks to have a whole lot of road car interior and under-bonnet trim still in place, and probably plenty more that's unseen as well.

st4

1,359 posts

133 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
bakerstreet said:
I just don't know what that shot is.
Customers.

WJNB

2,637 posts

161 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
For a company in desperate straits why? A waste of time & effort surely. Will the populace rally round & buy one because of such silliness?

ntiz

2,339 posts

136 months

Thursday 14th February 2019
quotequote all
This is really cool I totally approve of the idea although would have been more fun with the V8 as it’s not for purpose other than a hit of fun.

The big thing is should they really be messing around with stuff like this when you are posting massive losses??

Seems a bit of a vanity project which is all well and good if you have loads of cash but they don’t. Although I guess the bank of TATA can afford it.