2021 Range Rover

Next-generation Range Rover teased ahead of official unveiling

There are few cars more recognisable and iconic as the Land Rover Range Rover – set to make its global debut on Tuesday 26th October, the first teaser image of the benchmark luxury off-roader has been released.

For over five decades, this moniker has been a pioneer, leading by example and continuously innovating, finding new ways to merge the worlds of luxury and off-road ability. The Queen drives one, and one could argue that there’s no greater seal of approval than that.

“The New Range Rover is a vehicle with a peerless character, from the impeccable restraint of its exterior to the flawless tranquil sanctuary of its cabin. Informed by creative intellect and a desire for perfection, it doesn’t follow fashion or trend, but by a modernist design philosophy, combined with over 50 years of evolution, it is quite simply the most desirable Range Rover ever created,” said Prof Gerry McGovern OBE, Chief Creative Officer, Jaguar Land Rover.



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This is the first image of the new, fifth-gen Range Rover

Yeah, this is all we’ve had from Land Rover so far. But still, a new Rangie is big news

We’re not quite sure how much you’ll be able to decipher from the image above, but that blurry thing there is the brand new, fifth-generation Range Rover. Yep, exciting stuff.

Land Rover will pull the wraps off (and sort out the image focus) on Tuesday 26 October at 20:45 UK time, so keep your eyes peeled on TopGear.com then for the full lowdown.

JLR chief Gerry McGovern has promised that the new Rangie “doesn’t follow fashion or trend” and that it deploys a “modernist design philosophy, combined with over 50 years of evolution”.

https://www.topgear.com/car-news/first-look/heres-your-first-glimpse-all-new-range-rover-kinda
 
New 2021 Range Rover leaks ahead of reveal next week

Fifth-generation Range Rover is about to be officially unwrapped, but new images show off its final design

Land Rover will officially reveal the new, fifth-generation Range Rover next Tuesday (26 October) but a selection of images leaked online have previewed the final design.

Posted to Instagram by cochespias, the low-quality pictures show the reinvented flagship SUV from various angles, giving us our first look at the final design without any camouflage. As expected, the styling overhaul is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, and appears to be centred more on giving a smoother and more minimalist overall look.

A new grille, light clusters and bumpers help to mark this out as the fifth-generation car, but more striking is a new black panel that dominates the rear end, extending up the sides and along the top of the tailgate, housing new-look vertical brake light clusters. Elsewhere, it looks to be a case of updating the Range Rover's trademark features; the silhouette is relatively unchanged, the distinctive 'gills' still feature ahead of the front doors and the bonnet looks to be a clamshell-style design.

Pictures of the interior give less away, but we can see a new touchscreen running Jaguar Land Rover's latest Pivi Pro software, a fresh new steering wheel and centre console design and an all-digital climate control stack. Further details will be given at the car's reveal, which will be covered live at autocar.co.uk next Tuesday evening.

Images previously submitted to Autocar by reader Mohammed Rajak showed a pair of camouflaged test mules running around the Highlands, one of which towing a trailer, likely for powertrain telemetry purposes.



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love the rear lights!

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The Next Range Rover Has Leaked Everywhere All At Once

British cars have always been known for leaking, but not usually like this.

It’s not uncommon for vehicles to leak out just before they’re announced. Sometimes, those “leaks” are even intentionally placed, just to drum up interest around an upcoming product. This, however, is a new one: the same pre-production car showing up in three different places, all in one day.

The next-generation Land Rover Range Rover is set for a full reveal in less than a week, but today we got a sneak peek at almost all of it — including some features that are brand-new to the nameplate.

The first photos of the Range Rover came courtesy of a French forum called Worldscoop, dedicated to photos of unreleased cars. A poster there got ahold of a series of renders of the upcoming Range Rover from an as-yet-unreleased French-language issue of 4X4 Magazine, and posted photos of the exterior and interior of the upcoming car.

The renders primarily focused on this beige-silver Rover, though a dark gray exterior shot was also included. Even more interesting than the lightly-revised exterior, however, are the completely updated interior photos.


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Next-generation Range Rover leaked ahead of official reveal

Officially teased just yesterday, images of the next-generation Range Rover have already been leaked. The series of images gives us a clear look at what the exterior and interior of the luxury SUV will look like.

As sourced from Instagram user Cochespias, the front of the next-generation Range Rover depicts a rather familiar face with a set of rectangular LED headlamps and chrome trimmings for the grille and the new lower air intake that continues throughout the bumper. From this angle we can also see a floating roof design, retractable door handles, chrome trimming on the front door and a bold set of alloy wheels. Further highlights include a sleek anti-scuff plate.

The rear is where we notice the biggest change to the design. Here, a much more futuristic LED taillamp cluster has been applied but the split tailgate remains. A new dynamic bumper design housing two reflectors can also be noticed. Lastly, from the rear we can also spot a pair of shark fin antennae applied to the roof.

 
All-New Range Rover Leaked Ahead of Reveal

The all-new Range Rover luxury SUV has been leaked ahead of its reveal next week. Here’s what we know so far.

What you see here is the all-new 5th-generation Range Rover and while its official debut is scheduled for the last week in October, images of it have leaked online.

Thanks to the Cochespias instagram account, these images may not be of the highest quality, but we can get a good look at the final design. The front seems to be mostly the same, with some clever touches here and there to give it a modern and minimalist style. It’s the rear of the all-new Range Rover that’s causing some controversy as the British brand appears to have ditched the traditional rear light arrangement in favour of a very unique look. We’re a bit baffled, but when it comes to car design, each to his/her own, so do let us know how you feel about this quirky new look.

A grainy image of the cabin was also leaked and there’s nothing too dramatic here. We can see there’s an even newer version of Jaguar Land Rover’s Pivi Pro software, which we’re big fans of. There’s a new-look steering wheel too.

As far as engines and powertrain go, we do know there’s a new platform underpinning this 5th generation of Range Rover. Given the way the world is going for electrification, this new platform will definitely be geared towards electrification, but it remains to be seen if the new model will be hybrid, fully-electric or will the range offer both?

https://www.cars.co.za/motoring-news/all-new-range-rover-leaked-ahead-of-reveal/106565/
 
New Range Rover leaked ahead of next week’s debut

Barely a day after Land Rover released the first teaser images of the new Range Rover ahead of its planned ‘reveal’ next week, scans of what appear to be official pictures have leaked all over social media, giving us our first proper look at the vehicle’s evolutionary but classy design.

The scans, which were posted on Instagram by Cochespias, appear to have originated from France’s 4x4 magazine ahead of it hitting the shelves.

At the same time, other images of the new SUV spied in the flesh have appeared on various Instagram accounts, like the example below.

The front and side profile of the new Range Rover are very much a mild evolution of the current model, with smoother lines, however the rear end looks radically different with its rectangular motif that incorporates slim vertical taillights.

The new Range Rover is set to be Jaguar Land Rover’s first product to be underpinned by the new MLA modular architecture, which accommodates traditional combustion engines as well as fully electric powertrains.

https://www.iol.co.za/motoring/late...ks-debut-ab56ba3b-0241-4ae5-9332-4ee28b93d074
 
Does anyone remember the outgoing Range Rover’s huge styling controversy?

The soon-to-be-replaced full-fat Range Rover upset many purists back in 2012. Who still cares?

It’s 2021. A new Range Rover is about to be officially revealed. A car that Land Rover will depend on. A car that defines Britishness on wheels. One of the only cars which can be driven with equal impunity by Queen Elizabeth II and Cardi B.

Allow me to cast your minds back to 2012. The London Olympics have been a tub-thumping success, Lewis Hamilton is about to retire from more grand prix than he wins in one season, and a brand-new Range Rover has just been revealed. And boy-oh-boy, the purists were ANGRY.

It wasn’t the swept back, Evoque-style headlights, or the more rounded, aerodynamic front that wound up the faithful. It was the side vents. Or lack-of.

The third-gen ‘L322’ Rangie had worn a handsome vertical vent behind its front tyres, allowing heat from the family of Jaguar and BMW engines to escape the engine bay. It was a subtle feature – a motif not used on any Range Rover before – but it suited the deluxe 4x4.

The replacement car didn’t need these vents. The new RR had a taller wading depth, and the engines breathed in through a higher air intake. Suddenly, vents were superfluous. But the Land Rover design team wanted to keep them, so they installed a slotted ‘suggested vent’ on the front door panel.

This single feature became as divisive as the current Discovery’s lop-sided back numberplate. Land Rover ultras fizzed with fury over this fakery, this chintz, this needless sop to styling. And then they discovered you could, at extra cost, have this not-a-vent painted in a contrasting colour to the rest of the body. And they burst with explosive indignance.

And yet… the outgoing Range Rover has been a roaring success. It’s ushered in the bespoke age of SVO, spawned a long-wheelbase version, and a hybrid.

 
 
New 2021 Range Rover to be officially revealed tomorrow

Fifth-generation Range Rover was previewed in leaked images but full details arrive tomorrow evening

Land Rover will officially reveal the new, fifth-generation Range Rover tomorrow (26 October) after a selection of images leaked online previewed the final design.

Posted to Instagram by cochespias, the low-quality pictures show the reinvented flagship SUV from various angles, giving us our first look at the final design without any camouflage. As expected, the styling overhaul is evolutionary rather than revolutionary, and appears to be centred more on giving a smoother and more minimalist overall look.

A new grille, light clusters and bumpers help to mark this out as the fifth-generation car, but more striking is a new black panel that dominates the rear end, extending up the sides and along the top of the tailgate, housing new-look vertical brake light clusters. Elsewhere, it looks to be a case of updating the Range Rover's trademark features; the silhouette is relatively unchanged, the distinctive 'gills' still feature ahead of the front doors and the bonnet looks to be a clamshell-style design.

 
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