Road Test
Range Rover Sport TDV6 SE

It's Still A Large One
by David Finlay (Wed 21 Dec 05)

In Range Rover terms, the Sport is a compact vehicle. It would not be stretching things too far to suggest that it is the hot hatchback of the range, nimbler and fleeter than the luxury saloon that is the Range Rover proper. Yet when you encounter the Sport on its own, with no related products within sight, it hardly strikes you as a sporty machine. Stand beside one and it can seem almost intimidatingly large - or, if you prefer to look at it this way, conveniently large, with the ability either to convey five large adults or to carry just two along with a maximum of 2013 litres of luggage volume.

Range Rover Sport 18 - TDV6 SE.

As we've mentioned before, it is not actually a Range Rover at all. It looks like one, because the folk in charge reckoned that Range Rover owners might like the idea of a sports model while Land Rover owners almost certainly wouldn't. The fact remains, though, that this is in all important respects a third-generation Land Rover Discovery. The underpinnings are identical, the range of engines is the same, the more complex electronic Terrain Response transmission trickery is in place (which is not the case for the "real" range Rover) and the interior is absolutely standard Discovery with the exception of the wider central console.
 
Even with Terrain Response fitted, the Sport is a relatively modest achiever in off-road terms, at least by Land Rover's general standards. It actually performs brilliantly in the gloop, but a relatively low ride height (varying between 172mm and 227mm depending on suspension mode) means that ground clearance is more limiting than it is on the Discovery.
 
Range Rover Sport 20 - TDV6 SE Boot.Range Rover Sport 20 - TDV6 SE Boot.On the other hand, if it's now well understood that few owners of higher-specification Land Rovers as a whole actually go off-roading to any significant extent - even though they have the means to do it to a very advanced level - this is most particularly so when it comes to the Sport. Style, branding, luxury and visibility are all higher priorities, and so too is its behaviour on properly-surfaced roads.
 
The company says that this is "the best-performing and best-handling vehicle" it has ever built. There can be few arguments about this. Present-day Range Rovers and Discoveries are, considering their bulk, amazingly quick, quiet and nimble, and the Sport is the best of them all in these respects. But shift the point of reference - compare the Sport with any luxury vehicle you might otherwise choose - and its massive weight (yes, though it's smaller than the Range Rover) and great height (yes, it's lower too) become very obvious.
 
The Sport rides amazingly well, all things considered, and has levels of grip which seem extraordinary when you think of what the tyres have to deal with, but from behind the wheel there is never any doubt that you have an awful lot of car underneath you.

More . . .
 

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