2010
Range Rover Sport Supercharged
A "Grand Touring" car is one that is fast, comfortable, and
luxurious, and meant for long-distance travel at a high
average speed. The category originally applied to two-seat,
or perhaps 2+2, coupes that offered performance equal to or
better than the sports cars of the day, with far greater
comfort. This still may be the purist definition, but over
the years there have been a number of sedans that could be
considered for the category as well.
And one SUV.
With a steel monocoque structure and an integrated chassis,
the Range Rover HSE still has the smooth handling even when
towing and hauling up to 7716 pounds with trailer brake.
Furthermore, this range rover car rental has comprehensive
safety systems to ensure it offers maximum protection even
when driving in off-road conditions. The eight airbags with
front, side and head airbags for the driver and front-seat
passenger as well as head and seat-mounted side airbags for
the rear. There is also the advanced front and rear park
distance control and a rearview colour television camera
which is especially handy when backing up. The Range Rover
HSE gives you extra security protection with deadlocks, an
ultrasound sonic alarm system and a panic button that
activates locks for additional security which is always a
bonus to have when traveling in big cities such as US.
The interior is tastefully appointed with pleasing
architectural designs, creating a light and airy atmosphere
in the cabin. Spacious and comfortable, the luscious leather
seats will cushion the passengers even on off-road
excursions. The Range Rover HSE range rover car rental is
also loaded with many of the latest technology offerings
including three-zone climate control, a 12-way power
driver’s seat with three memory settings and rain sensing
windshield wiper. A state-of-the-art voice controlled DVD
based GPS navigation system is provided as well, perfect for
traveling around a big city like US. There is also the
off-road mode featuring elevation contours that will guide
you to your destination as well as tracking where you have
been, making exploration trips all the more fun and
convenient. To add to the pleasurable ride, you can enjoy
your favourite tunes with the premium Harman/Kardon digital
surround-sound system with a six-disc CD changer and 14
strategically placed speakers for enhanced listening
experience.
If the idea of grand touring is fast, comfortable
long-distance travel, the Range Rover Sport can accommodate
very well, thank you, especially in supercharged form. And
pavement is not strictly necessary. It is a Range Rover,
after all.
The Range Rover Sport Supercharged is also a very high-tech
Range Rover, almost as far removed from the ancient Land
Rovers seen in BBC nature documentaries as an F22 is from a
Spitfire. Cast iron and solid axles are long-gone, replaced
by high-strength steels and aluminum and magnesium alloys -
and a highly sophisticated electronically-controlled active
air suspension that is the key to the Sport Supercharged's
fine road manners.
There are two models of Range Rover Sport. The HSE is
equipped with a 300-horsepower 4.4-liter naturally-aspirated
V8, while the Supercharged model has a namesake 4.2 liter
supercharged and intercooled V8 with 390 horsepower and 410
lb-ft of torque. Both engines are matched to a multi-mode
six-speed ZF automatic transmission and then to a full-time
dual-range four-wheel drive system, also
electronically-managed.
While there is a ladder frame underneath the Sport, it is
built with hydroforming technology. And it is mated, by
means of small dampers to a monocoque body structure to give
the benefits of both body-on-frame and unibody construction.
Solid axles belong to the past - the Sport has independent
double wishbones at all four corners, with monotube dampers
and electronically-controlled air springs. The Dynamic
Response system, optional in the HSE and standard in the
Supercharged, consists of active anti-roll bars that
minimize body motion during cornering, acceleration, and
braking. It is the key to the Range Rover Sport
Supercharged's impressive handling.
With a distinctive profile, the Range Rover HSE is easily
recognizable by its smooth contour and unique detailing.
Compared to other SUVs, this range rover car rental looks
like a trim, muscular athlete that is tough yet agile. Built
on a relatively shorter wheelbase, the front of the Range
Rover HSE is capped by the Range Rover’s trademark clamshell
hood and head lighting clusters powered by bi-xenon
headlamps. The futuristic look is completed with the two
round ports in the rear with the deeply buried foglamps and
taillights. The smooth exterior is further enhanced by the
high beltline and a flat expanse of sleek metal on the side
of the body. It is hard not to receive jealous looks when
cruising around town in US in this eye-catching Range Rover
HSE range rover car rental.
Under the hood, the Range Rover HSE is powered by the new
Jaguar 4.4 liter V8 engine, making it more powerful and
quicker than its predecessors. With 305 horsepower and 325
pound-feet of torque, this range rover car rental can easily
gallop off from 0-60 mph in just over 9 seconds. The Range
Rover HSE is also equipped with Dynamic Stability Control
(DSC), helping drivers prevent from skidding and stay on
their intended course. This range rover car rental has the
civilized sophistication with the outback brawn, the Range
Rover HSE impressive off-road prowess set the standards for
the SUVs in its class. This classy range rover car rental
will surely surpass all your expectations, so hurry and book
the Range Rover HSE for your upcoming travel to US!
And it is most impressive on the road, with reflexes and
responses that belie its considerable weight. I started my
week with the Sport Supercharged expecting a typical
overweight, sluggish-handling SUV. I couldn't have been more
wrong. No laws of physics are actually broken, but the Land
Rover engineers appear to have found some loopholes. There
is plenty of sport with the utility and all-surface,
all-weather capability. The Dynamic Response system keeps
the big beast flat and stable, even when driven in the
spirited manner encouraged by the supercharged engine. The
interior is outfitted and equipped as expected in a top-line
luxury vehicle, with first-class comfort and plenty of room
- but it's not so large as to be unwieldy in traffic or
while parking. The Range Rover Sport Supercharged is a fine
vehicle for a long, fast journey almost anywhere. Pavement
optional.
APPEARANCE: Range
Rovers have had a readily-identifiable look since Day One,
and the Sport doesn't break the mold. It is the box - or two
boxes, really - that it came in, with only minor
modifications for styling purposes. The corners and edges
are slightly rounded, and an incised character line sweeps
back on the sides from the bottom of the hood. That line
becomes the beltline, as at the front it separates the hood
from the grille, while at the rear it tops the large
rectangular taillights and then becomes the lower edge of
the rear window structure. The grille is made of
satin-finished perforated horizontal slats, flanked by
multiple headlights under plastic covers. Bumpers are
car-like, with body-colored plastic covers and foglamps are
inset into the front. Chrome trim is minimal. Where one
might expect running boards, at the bottom of the doors, are
"aero kit" sill extensions that look like they came right
off a sports car, and the lower bumper styling is also far
more sports car than sport-utility. It says "to the track!"
more loudly than "to the veldt".
COMFORT: Sport
buckets in a Range Rover? Believe it. And they are
wonderfully comfortable and supportive, too. Interior decor
is wood and leather, but in a modern style that is less
opulent, more Continental, than some older Range Rovers. The
Sport is as fully-appointed as expected from Range Rover,
which invented the luxury sport-utility in 1970. Anything
that can be power-operated is, materials and construction
are first-rate, and there is no shortage of head, leg, or
shoulder room - even in the rear seat. Commonly-used
controls and systems are simple and self-explanatory to use,
even the touch-screen navigation system - which thankfully
does not integrate the audio and climate system controls. As
in other Land Rover products, the monitor screen can also
display 4x4 information, more for passenger amusement than
anything else. The rear seat folds 60/40 for cargo, and
useful cabin storage spaces include a dual glovebox.
SAFETY: Passive
safety comes from sturdy frame and body structures with
hydroformed steel frame rails for front, side, and rear
protection. Controlled-deformation crumple zones in the
front and rear also protect, as do front, front side, and
side-curtain airbags. On the active safety front, credit
excellent road manners and antilock brakes, with electronic
brake-force distribution, brake assist, dynamic stability
control, and active roll mitigation.
RIDE AND HANDLING:
Competition-developed active suspension technology reaches
its peak not in a sports car but in a sport utility?
Surprising, but true. The Range Rover Sport "Integrated
Body-frame" hybrid ladder/monocoque structure provides a
solid base for the fully-independent double wishbone
suspension, and combines the ruggedness of a ladder frame
with the rigidity and refinement of a unitized body
structure, for off-road use and all-around passenger comfort
and quiet. Electronically-controlled air shocks, with three
ride height adjustment levels, and monotube shocks are
standard fare in both models, but the Supercharged gets the
Dynamic Response active anti-roll bar system as standard
equipment. It controls body roll in cornering, acceleration,
and deceleration by increasing stiffness when and where
necessary. If a roll bar at one corner needs to be stiffer,
momentarily, it will be stiffer, but only for the time
necessary. Result? Flat cornering, and a smooth, comfortable
ride. The bars are relaxed in off-road mode, allowing the
necessary greater suspension travel. The Terrain Response
system, controlled by a console-mounted knob, controls the
settings of and interactions between the engine,
transmission, shocks, roll bars, differentials, stability
and traction control systems, antilock brakes, and hill
descent control systems. Modern electronics (and software)
at work. Cornering behavior is exemplary, and the ride
quality is as good as any comparable European luxury sedan.
With 40-profile tires and expensive alloy rims I'd be leery
of any serious off-road work, but snow and improved dirt and
gravel should pose few difficulties.
PERFORMANCE: Under
the Sport Supercharged's hood sits 4.2 liters of
supercharged and intercooled twincam, aluminum alloy V8. 390
horsepower, 410 lb-ft of torque, instant acceleration. With
torque like that, a transmission is hardly needed, but the
Sport's ZF six-speed automatic contributes to the vehicle's
prowess and civility. With 0-60 acceleration in the low 7
second range, passing and merging are no problem. There is a
manual-shift mode, but rarely is there the slightest
necessity as torque comes in early and strong, peaking at
3500 rpm. With its 5700-pound mass and the available power,
stopping a Range Rover Sport takes strong brakes, and the
Dynamic Response Package's are up to the task. Four-piston
Brembo calipers grip large vented discs in front, with
smaller calipers and rotors at the rear. Fuel economy? Do
the math... 5700 pounds + 390 horsepower != "economy". The
laws of physics are always obeyed, no loopholes here. At
around 13 mpg overall, it's no different from most other
SUVs.