Lodi News-Sentinel

Jaguar F-Pace SVR out-growls the Jaguar EV

- By Henry Payne JAGUAR F-PACE SVR

Convention­al wisdom these days is that the next generation wants electric cars. Someone forgot to tell my neighbors.

When I arrived at their house with the 2019 Jaguar F-Pace SVR, the supercharg­ed V-8 shook the foundation like a California earthquake. Kids poured out the front door, practicall­y dragging their father behind them.

The Jag super-ute is the latest twisted performanc­e SUV to hit the market along with other fivedoor track monsters like the Porsche Macan Turbo S and Alfa Stelvio Quadrifogl­io. The SVR is the most powerful missile this side of the insane, 707-horse Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk. The Jaguar’s 550 horsepower feed all four wheels for quick dashes to the, um, grocery store.

You know, a family car.

The kids piled three abreast into the F-Pace’s spacious back seat. Their dad turned the key and the Jaguar exploded to life like a hungry zoo animal that had just been thrown a sirloin steak. GROOOOWWWR­RRR! Cheers from the rugrat gallery! Dad rolled down the street, the big cat gurgling with menace.

When we hit Telegraph Road, father floored it and all hell broke loose. The SVR leapt forward on all four paws, the 5.0-liter V-8 howled in our ears while the eight-speed transmissi­on snapped off millisecon­d-quick shifts. As the speedo rushed toward triple digits, my neighbor backed off the throttle and the quad tailpipes let out a Snap! Crackle! Pop! like firecracke­rs on the Fourth of July. Bedlam in the backseat!

At the helm, their father let out a demented, Tim Allen-like cackle, too.

Nothing growls like a Jaguar. Which raises the question, why would anyone want an electric Jag? Don’t get me wrong, the IPace is a marvelous piece of work. A low-slung crossover, it’s nicely proportion­ed with big wheels, and a distinctiv­e hatchback profile. Inside, it shares the same switchgear with its Jaguar brethren: digital instrument display, touchscree­n, big dials.

Punch the accelerato­r pedal, and the electric cat pounces with instant torque. Silent. Stealthy.

“Just like a Tesla!” the neighbors said when I brought it by a few months back.

But if your ship has finally come in and you have $80,000 in the bank, do you want a Jaguar that sounds like a Tesla — or a Jaguar that growls like a Jaguar?

Convention­al wisdom these days holds that, as more electric SUVs from Jaguar, Audi, Mercedes, BMW, Porsche, etc., flood the market, Tesla sales will fade. I have my doubts. As do customers, apparently.

Despite rave media reviews and a trophy case full of Best Car of Year honors, the 2019 Jaguar IPace electric car sells just over 200 cars a month.

Brand matters and Tesla has establishe­d itself as a pioneering EV brand. Jaguar’s brand is also very strong but for other reasons. For decades the nouveau riche have gravitated to Jaguar for its slinky designs, racing success and ... growl.

There’s also the fact that the FPace SVR is not just emotionall­y more satisfying to the I-Pace (my neighbors are still grinning from their ride), but is superior in most other ways including cargo room, head room, and — crucially — range.

Open up the F-Pace SVR on the interstate and you’ll drink gas so fast you will swear you can see the gas gauge needle moving. But there are filling stations everywhere.

Lead-foot the I-Pace and you won’t get to your destinatio­n easily.

Unlike Tesla and its exclusive network of Level 3, 150-kilowatt DC supercharg­ers, the Jaguar is dependent on independen­t charging networks like Electrify America. Even where 240-volt Level 2 chargers exist, I have found service to be spotty.

Such limitation­s could throw a wet blanket on the family vacation.

The gas-powered F-Pace, on the other hand, will not only get you anywhere you want to go — it’ll do so with gusto.

Nothing sours the next generation on electric cars like limiting their vacation options. And from my own experience, nothing makes my wife more nervous than the idea that an electric car will strand us in the boondocks.

The F-Pace also comes with more affordable options than the electric I-Pace.

Halo cars like the F-Pace SVR are designed in part to bring folks into the dealership to whet their appetite. But if my $89,900 side of beef tester is too much for the bank account, customers can choose more affordable fare like Vehicle type: Front-engine, allwheel drive, five-passenger SUV

Price: Base price $81,015, including $1,025 destinatio­n charge ($89,900 as tested)

Powerplant: 5.0-liter supercharg­ed V-8

Power: 550 horsepower, 502 pound-feet of torque

Transmissi­on: 8-speed automatic

Performanc­e: 0-60 mph, 4.3 sec. (Car and Driver); top speed: 176 mph

Weight: 4,395 pounds

Fuel economy: EPA: 16 city/22 highway/18 combined; range: 489 miles

the base, $44,900 F-Pace turbo-4 or the $60,000 turbo-6.

As a result, Americans are gobbling up about 1,200 F-Paces a month. If the electric I-Pace is your cup of tea, then it’s a pricey cup of tea. Lithium-ion batteries are expensive to make and the EV SUV starts at $70,000.

For most families, the $45,000 FPace’s handsome Jaguar grille and interior will do just fine, thank you very much. Like the TV ads with tennis star Kei Nishikori tooling around in an F-Pace shadowed by his alter-ego self in the original SVR, the F-Type two-door sports car, they will be content with the Jaguar image.

For the truly deranged (like yours truly) there is the 550-horse F-Pace SVR. So on your way to dropping the kids off at soccer practice you can prowl the stoplights for unsuspecti­ng V-8-powered Dodge Challenger R/Ts.

Set launch control by depressing the brake pedal with your left foot. Then bury the accelerato­r pedal. Then release the brake.

WORRRAAAUA­AGGH! Goes the V-8.

AWESOOOOOM­E! go the kids.

 ?? JAGUAR ?? The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace has a supercharg­ed 5.0-liter V8 gas engine offering 550 horsepower.
JAGUAR The 2019 Jaguar F-Pace has a supercharg­ed 5.0-liter V8 gas engine offering 550 horsepower.
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