CAR (UK)

Does it work? Land Rover’s X-ray displays

Don’t let solid objects get in the way of the stu you want to see – choose Land Rover’s ClearSight systems. By Ben Miller

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For serious off-road drivers, it’s all part of the ‘fun’. When the going gets tough and/or tight, you stay in the car and send forth your plucky mate/spouse/underling to see you through, whether it’s threading the car between tree trunks, guiding you at a snail’s pace through a boulder field or seeing you into the multi-storey car park without kerbing a wheel.

But such shenanigan­s aren’t so appealing for the rest of us, hence Land Rover’s ClearSight Ground View system, which debuted a couple of years ago in the Mk2 Evoque. Similar systems are also available elsewhere – we’ve been off-road in the revised Bentayga, which helps in much the same way when you’re nosing your £150k SUV into blind oblivion. The Land Rover system simply takes camera feeds from the two door mirrors and another in the front grille and, with a bit of clever editing, stitches them together to show a virtual image of the terrain in front of the car on the main infotainme­nt screen. Index lines then denote the corners of the car, for your reference, and the front wheels are ghosted in to help you place them (as per the screenshot, right). You can also add individual views of the outer faces of each front wheel, which is extremely handy in tight off-road going – and the aforementi­oned multi-storey.

That was the Evoque system. ClearSight Ground View is also available on the new Defender, and brings more functional­ity. Activate the system by hitting the parking camera on the infotainme­nt screen. ‘On Road’ gives a bird’s-eye view and a view ahead from a low vantage point; ‘Off-Road’ gives a viewpoint with two ghosted-in front wheels and a graphic displaying nerdy stuff like the position of each wheel within its suspension stroke and whether your two differenti­als are running open or locked up; ‘Towing’ lets you keep an eye on that errant trailer of yours.

The ClearSight Rear View Mirror (a £525 option on the most basic of Defenders) uses the same idea – cameras to remove physical obstructio­ns to handy lines of sight – to ensure your rear-view mirror is never full of something useless, like a boot loaded to the roof with stuff or the bored facial features of a passenger in the middle of the second row. Buttons on the underside of the mirror let you switch between the actual mirror and the ClearSight camera feed which, being digital, takes a moment to adjust to when you glance at it, but works well in delivering a clear view of the world behind you and your Land Rover.

Does it work?

Yes. Both systems work well, with Ground View proving particular­ly useful o -road, not least when climbing steep slopes that leave the windscreen full of nothing but sky.

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