Cars / Cars and Bikes

Longer, greener Range Rover launches in Beijing

Land Rover has unveiled at this year’s Beijing Motor Show the Range Rover Hybrid Long Wheelbase.

Apr 24, 2014 | By AFPRelaxnews

Range Rover Hybrid Long Wheelbase

The stretched luxury off roader will become the first ever diesel-electric hybrid car to go on sale in China when deliveries commence at the end of the year.

From the outside, the new Range Rover on display at the Beijing motor show is pretty much identical to the standard long wheelbase model and as such offers rear passengers an extra 186mm of legroom and with the upgraded seating package, seats that can recline to 17°.

However, under the hood things are very different. A 3.0-liter SDV6 diesel engine has been mated with a 35kW electric motor and the result is a 26 percent reduction in CO2 emissions — 169g/kg — and a combined cycle fuel economy of 6.4 l/100 km (44.1mpg).

When working in tandem, the engines produce 340PS (335.4bhp) which isn’t bad at all, but what is very impressive is the fact that the torque on tap, 700Nm (between 1,500 and 3,000rpm), is equal to that offered by the petrol-powered V8 version of the car.

And for anyone serious about off-road performance, torque and horsepower trump top speed and 0-100km/h acceleration every time.

Therefore potential buyers will be happy to learn that Land Rover has been able to pack in the new powertrain while retaining all of the Range Rover’s defining capabilities. It will come with the same class-leading terrain response and all-wheel drive systems found on the non-hybrid version and will retain its wading depth of 900mm.

But for when the car is on, rather than off-road, the Range Rover can travel at 48km/h (30mph) for a distance of 1.6km on just electric power before the diesel engine fires up again and, like on a number of new hybrid supercars, the electric motor is used to fill in gaps in acceleration and response from the diesel engine so that progress is always smooth.

Range rover hybrid Silk Road

The hybrid powertrain is coming to market following grueling real-world tests. In 2013 Land Rover drove a fleet of hybrid Range Rovers from Solihull in Birmingham and across central Asia to Mumbai, India.

And after the 16,000km trip the cars were stripped down, data gathered and the systems fine-tuned, ready for consumers.

The global order book for the Hybrid Range Rover opens in May with first deliveries scheduled before the end of 2014.


 
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