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Range Rover D300 Vogue 2021 UK Review

While the D300 is Land Rover’s entry-level Range Rover, it might still be all the luxury car you ever wanted, writes Matt Saunders

- AUTOCAR

Land Rover’s all-new, mild-hybridized, 3.0-litre straight six diesel engine powers two versions of the full-sized Range Rover: the D350 and this D300 which now becomes the entry-level version of the company’s biggest, poshest 4x4, in as-tested Vogue trim level.

From here, the modern Range Rover lineup rockets up to just short of £180,000 for a long-wheelbase, 557 brake horse-powered supercharg­ed V8 ‘SVAutobiog­raphy.’ But so what? Discoverin­g what comes as standard on a bottom-rung, £83,000 Range Rover in 2021 is much more interestin­g. And it’s not cloth trim, ‘workout’ windows and a VM Motori four-cylinder diesel anymore, that’s for sure.

As well as height-adjustable air suspension and the de rigeur permanent fourwheel drive with low range, there’s threezone climate control, digital instrument­s, a gesture-controlled powered tailgate and a cooled front armrest cubby for starters. The Range Rover still hasn’t received JLR’s very latest ‘Pivi Pro’ infotainme­nt system, but the Touch Pro Duo system it does use now has both Apple CarPlay and Android Auto smartphone mirroring, and also gives you a WiFi hotspot and a digital TV tuner for no extra cost.

WHAT’S IT LIKE?

This lower-end diesel engine gives up 49bhp to the D350 but less than 40lb ft of torque, and in terms of on-road performanc­e it’s less than half-a-second slower and a couple of miles-to-the-gallon more efficient.

On the road, there’s plenty of accessible performanc­e available; compared even to cars with the supercharg­ed V8 models, this version feels really effortless to drive because it so often has all the torque it needs to meet a roll-on performanc­e demand without needing a downshift. When you do need to work the engine harder, it remains smooth and willing beyond 3500rpm; it isn’t exactly sweet to listen to, but it’s an awfully long way from objectiona­ble.

Rolling refinement is very good indeed. So distant is the hum of the straight six at cruising revs, with wind noise being very well suppressed also, that road noise becomes the greatest source of complaint in the car — and it isn’t really one anyone would actually complain about. Our test car had optional 21in wheels and rode on Pirelli Scorpion Verde all-season tyres, and made just a whisper more road hum than the most refined limousines in the world. With the utmost luxury in mind, there would likely be something to be said for

sticking with 20s and the car’s standard rubber.

The Range Rover remains a big car with a certain old-school gentility engineered into its dynamic character: the oversized steering wheel drives a slow-paced rack, and the soft ride lets the car simply waft its way down the road. Neverthele­ss, it can be driven and placed surprising­ly accurately because its controls are so smooth and linear, and so it’s a pleasure to glide serenely onward in it. There also seemed a telling advantage on fine ride control for the D300 we tested compared with a bigger, heavier-engined petrol V8, the former being more level and less disturbed by bigger lumps and bumps on the road than the latter.

Land Rover’s updates to the Range Rover’s interior have kept it feeling surprising­ly contempora­ry, despite being so close to replacemen­t. The firm’s glossy touchscree­n heater controls integrate very well into the surroundin­g dashboard design, which is bold and architectu­ral in style. Our test car had a lot of satin chrome and ‘piano black’ trim, as is so fashionabl­e in luxury cars, but deployed it attractive­ly. Even in standard-wheelbase cars, meanwhile, there’s enough space in the back for even taller adult passengers to stretch and sprawl a bit, and the visibility of the world outside from all quarters remains genuinely special.

SHOULD I BUY ONE?

The very end of a new car’s lifecycle is generally thought of as the wrong end to put private money in. There is certainly a fifth-generation Range Rover waiting in the wings for an unveiling at some point in 2021; at which point you’ll be able to wipe off an extra few thousand pounds from the residual value of a car that would have been on a fairly steep downward trajectory anyway.

Range Rovers are not cheap — to buy, to run, or simply to admire on your driveway — and it’s a fallacy to think that, by buying the bottom-end version, you can do much to mitigate that.

Neverthele­ss, this fourth-generation Range Rover has aged as well as any I can think of, consistent­ly becoming a better luxury car as the years have passed — and having started very well in the first place, when we recommende­d this car for a while as the very best luxury car you could buy full stop. Land Rover’s new ‘Ingenium’ diesel straight six is like the icing on a cake that’s been in the making since 2012, and it’s clearly the pick of the car’s engine lineup for anyone who pays for their own fuel (but who perhaps doesn’t pay company car tax).

While a £180,000 Range Rover may be appealing to some, it may just as likely be as grotesque as it is irrelevant to others. The more interestin­g news is, you needn’t spend half as much as that to know this car at its very best.

 ??  ?? Land Rover’s updates to the Range Rover’s interior have kept it feeling surprising­ly contempora­ry.
Land Rover’s updates to the Range Rover’s interior have kept it feeling surprising­ly contempora­ry.
 ??  ?? If required to work the engine harder, take comfort in the fact that the D300 Vogue has been described as ‘smooth and willing’ beyond 3500rpm.
If required to work the engine harder, take comfort in the fact that the D300 Vogue has been described as ‘smooth and willing’ beyond 3500rpm.
 ??  ?? The D300 Vogue has won plaudits for its visibility of the world outside from all quarters.
The D300 Vogue has won plaudits for its visibility of the world outside from all quarters.

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