West Lothian Courier

Pulling power

- Discovery takes title

Land Rover’s Discovery has been named the Tow Car of the Decade.

The British- built 4x4 carried off the special honour in the annual Tow Car Awards which is celebratin­g its tenth anniversar­y.

Judged by experts from The Camping and Caravannin­g Club, Practical Caravan magazine and What Car? this year’s top award went to the Skoda Superb hatch which beat off competitio­n from 41 other models.

And to mark the anniversar­y, the judges honoured the Land Rover Discovery 4 as the most capable tow car of the past 10 years for its unrivalled performanc­e since the competitio­n began in 2007.

The Discovery 4, which won the tow car title outright in 2010, was also voted best in the over 1.9-tonnes category in this year’s awards which also saw the Discovery Sport taking the title in the 1.7-tonne section.

It came as a specially modified Discovery Sport demonstrat­ed its pulling power by towing three train carriages weighing more than 100 tonnes along a seven mile section of railway in northern Switzerlan­d, crossing the River Rhine on the dramatic Hemishofen bridge – a steel span measuring 935 feet long and soaring 85 feet above the valley floor.

Though the Discovery Sport has a certified maximum towing weight of 2.5 tonnes, it was able to pull 60 times its own weight, powered by Jaguar Land Rover’s 180ps Ingenium diesel engine providing 430Nm of torque.

For the test, the vehicle’s drivetrain remained unchanged, the only modificati­on being the fitting of rail wheels by specialist­s Aquarius Railroad Technologi­es to act as stabiliser­s.

The Discovery Sport completed the pull without the aid of a low-range gearbox, instead using its state-of-the-art nine-speed automatic gearbox and Terrain Response technology to generate the traction.

Aquarius Railroad Technologi­es was set up in Ripon, Yorkshire in 1999 by engineer James Platt who identified a gap in the rail infrastruc­ture market for road- to- rail vehicles for maintenanc­e purposes.

“For a vehicle of this size to pull a combined weight of more than 100 tonnes demonstrat­es real engineerin­g integrity and no modificati­ons were necessary,” said Mr Platt.

In the Tow Car Awards, David Motton of Practical Caravan magazine, said: “When it came to choosing our first Tow Car of the Decade, we unanimousl­y chose the Land Rover Discovery 4 as it had won more times than any other.”

 ??  ?? Sensationa­l the Discovery Sport in train action
Sensationa­l the Discovery Sport in train action

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