Autocar

Scooped: new Evoque

Next Range Rover shapes up

- MARK TISSHAW

Land Rover is just one year away from revealing its second-generation Evoque. The company will tinker little with the current car’s formula and will maintain the distinctiv­e coupé-style shape that helped define a segment.

The current Evoque helped transform the company into the much larger and more successful one it is today. Sales have never dropped below 100,000 units annually, even six years after it was launched.

Prototype versions of the Evoque Mk2 (pictured above) are a regular sight around the company’s Gaydon engineerin­g base, and it is understood Land Rover is preparing a reveal of the car in October next year at the Paris motor show, ahead of UK sales in early 2019.

The current Evoque, codenamed L538, has become firmly establishe­d since its launch, and design boss Gerry Mcgovern believes there is no need for the concept to be reinvented, saying it should not “lose key ingredient­s” and would be designed with the intention of making it “more relevant”. Mcgovern said that even years after its launch, the Evoque Mk1 – the design of which can be traced as far back as the Land Rover LRX concept car from 2008 – remained a “very distinctiv­e vehicle” that is “known for what it is: falling roof, rising beltline”.

For the next-generation model, Mcgovern said the task was to “take [the current car’s] integrity and make [it] more relevant”. Land Rover, he added, was looking at “how to make the vehicle more modern, precise, more comfortabl­e, more luxurious, those things – not just pure aesthetics”.

The design is set to draw inspiratio­n from the new Velar, which has already informed the styling changes to the recently revised Range Rover and Range Rover Sport models.

Much of the Velar’s interior technology, including its

dual touchscree­ns in the centre console and wide digital instrument binnacle, will also be introduced on the Evoque, as part of plan to boost the model’s connectivi­ty options.

The evolution of the design will extend to the car’s underpinni­ngs. The next-generation Evoque, codenamed L551, will be built on an overhauled version of the current car’s D8 architectu­re, which is Jaguar Land Rover’s only natively front-wheel-drive architectu­re for transverse engined models. Other developmen­ts of D8 are used on the Land Rover Discovery Sport and the Jaguar E-pace.

Refinement­s to the D8 underpinni­ngs will focus on improving the ride comfort of the Evoque, and the comfort levels for passengers. The firm has always resisted creating a pure performanc­e version of the Evoque – the model is considered every bit the ‘mini Range Rover’ in terms of luxury and refinement, both areas Land Rover will be looking to improve further with the second-generation car.

There will be no significan­t increase in size. The model will closely match the footprint of today’s car, which is 4390mm long and 1900mm wide. The wheelbase of 2660mm has been modestly increased to match the E-pace’s 2681mm. In addition, the track widths have been increased and a redesigned trailing arm suspension set-up will be used at the rear. All of these changes are aimed at improving cabin space for rear passengers.

Land Rover’s suite of new four-cylinder, turbocharg­ed Ingenium petrol and diesel engines, built at its Wolverhamp­ton engine

The next Evoque will retain the coupé-like shape that helped define a segment

manufactur­ing plant, will carry over to the new Evoque, each engine a 2.0-litre unit ranging in power output from 148bhp to 237bhp for the diesels, and from 237bhp to 296bhp for the petrols. There will be further improvemen­ts to the fuel economy and CO2 emissions of the engines in their applicatio­n in the secondgene­ration Evoque, aided by the increases in refinement being engineerin­g into the car’s architectu­re right from the start of developmen­t.

Front-wheel drive will be offered on entry-level versions of the new crossover, with all-wheel drive standard higher up the range. The latter is set to take the bulk of sales; most Evoques will sell for about £40,000, well above the expected starting price of around £33,000.

Each engine will be mated to JLR’S Zf-sourced ninespeed automatic gearbox, and Land Rover’s latest off-road technology will be offered to ensure the Evoque is no less capable than any other Land Rover model off road, a ‘credibilit­y’ message the company continuall­y pushes.

JLR has a stated target of having an electrifie­d version of each of its new models launched after 2020, but the Evoque will arrive just before that and consequent­ly there will be no electrifie­d version from launch.

However, it’s understood the Evoque is under considerat­ion to be the first JLR model to get a new mild-hybrid drivetrain currently in developmen­t. This combines a new three-cylinder 1.5-litre Ingenium engine with a small electric motor, backed up by a 48V electrical architectu­re to power ancillarie­s including air-con and the water pump. Equipping the Evoque with this drivetrain will require extensive changes to the car’s underpinni­ngs, and as such it will not be ready for launch until the early part of the next decade at the earliest. The mildhybrid set-up was previewed as part of the Evoque E technology project in 2015, and will be the hybrid drivetrain used across JLR’S natively front-wheeldrive models, currently the Evoque, Discovery Sport and E-pace. Other front-wheeldrive models are understood to be under considerat­ion as part of JLR’S plans to achieve one million sales per year, from a best of 583,313 units in 2016.

There are no confirmed plans to launch a pure electric Evoque due to the limitation­s of the D8 architectu­re. The first electric Land Rover model will instead be the ‘Road Rover’ model, as exclusivel­y revealed by Autocar recently (News, 20 September). The name ‘Road Rover’ is a working title for the model, however, and when it makes production the car will wear the Range Rover badge.

The next-generation Evoque range is understood to be limited to a single five-door bodystyle. The original Evoque actually launched as a threedoor ‘coupé’ version in 2011, followed a few months later by the five-door version, which has always been the best seller. Indeed, some sources put the five-door’s dominance as high as 95% of total production.

The Evoque line-up was extended further last year with the launch of the Evoque Cabriolet, which has been another success for Land Rover. The current version of the drop-top, which is priced from £45,250, will continue in production for some time after the launch of the nextgenera­tion Evoque, but a replacemen­t is understood to be planned for the early part of the next decade.

 ??  ?? Prototypes appear to have widened track and redesigned trailing arm suspension
Prototypes appear to have widened track and redesigned trailing arm suspension
 ??  ?? Front-end styling redolent of the Velar’s will feature on the next Evoque, as this test mule attests New Evoque will be similar in exterior size to its forebear
Front-end styling redolent of the Velar’s will feature on the next Evoque, as this test mule attests New Evoque will be similar in exterior size to its forebear
 ??  ?? IMAGE
IMAGE
 ??  ?? Evoque will remain true to Land Rover’s ‘go anywhere’ ethos
Evoque will remain true to Land Rover’s ‘go anywhere’ ethos

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