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2011 Range Rover Sport 3.0 SDV6 SE

Mileage: 8250

£46,790.00

2010 Range Rover Sport 3.0 TDV6 HSE

Mileage: 14625

£41,997.00

2010 Range Rover Sport 3.0 TDV6 HSE

Mileage: 29895

£39,500.00

Range Rover Sport Overview

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Range Rover Sport SE provides premium levels of prestige and comfort. Two new, striking exterior colours, Fuji White and Baltic Blue, are now available. The front grille with its Jupiter dark finish gives a strong, assertive appearance. There are Xenon headlamps with Range Rover signature ‘concentric circle’ LEDs, and a choice of stylish 19 inch alloy wheels. Like every Range Rover Sport, the SE has an acoustic windscreen and laminated front side windows, and a Rear Parking Aid is also standard. Inside there is the luxury of leather seats – electrically adjustable for driver and front passenger – as well as a choice of either walnut veneer or Anigre gloss finish for the centre console and door inserts. Push Button Start is a convenient touch. Automatic climate control – of course. A harman/kardon® audio system with Portable Audio Interface for iPod® and MP3 is available, as well as Hard Disk Drive Premium Navigation and Bluetooth® mobile phone connectivity. Land Rover’s unique Terrain Response® system is standard, and takes another step forward with new Hill Start Assist and Gradient Acceleration Control. On-road performance can be enhanced even further with the Dynamic Pack, comprising Adaptive Dynamics and Dynamic Response.

iPod is a trademark of Apple, Inc., registered in the US and other countries. The Bluetooth® word mark and logos are owned by the Bluetooth SIG, Inc. and any use of such marks by Land Rover is under licence.

Inchcape Landrover Guildford pride ourselves on offering the best deals on the latest range of New and Used Land Rover vehicles along with the best customer service.

Watch our Land Rover Defender video review to find out more. Simply click ‘Book a Land Rover Test Drive’ on the right to try out this amazing vehicle or why not check out our ‘Approved Used Land Rovers’

If you have any questions please don't hesitate to call 0845 129 6092 or email us.

Land Rover Range Rover Sport Environmental Information

Pictures: Land Rover Range Rover Sport
Scoring: Land Rover Range Rover Sport

Category:4x4 - Luxury

Performance80%
Handling80%
Comfort90%
Space70%
Styling90%
Build80%
Value70%
Equipment90%
Economy60%
Depreciation70%
Insurance60%
Total84%

Category:4x4 - Luxury

Performance80%
Handling70%
Comfort100%
Space90%
Styling90%
Build90%
Value60%
Equipment90%
Economy60%
Depreciation70%
Insurance60%
Total84%

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There's nothing quite like a Range Rover Sport. Jonathan Crouch discovers why.

Ten Second Review

The Range Rover Sport brings a dynamic, road-orientated sporting edge to Land Rover's product range, slotting neatly between the family-orientated Discovery and the super-luxury Range Rover. It all but matches the best of its sporting SUV rivals on the highway while decimating them when tarmac turns to turf. In other words, a very accomplished car indeed.

Background

Forty years ago, the iconic Range Rover was seen as a sporty, lifestyle-orientated product. But somewhere, at some time since, something changed. The Rangey became a plutocratic luxury saloon that also happened to have the SUV wherewithal to get you home if your country estate turned out to be halfway up a mountain. A car that raised a bemused eyebrow if you tried to hustle it down a twisting B-road. And a car that opened up a big gap on the more family-orientated Discovery that was Land Rover ownership's next rung down. It was to fill this space that the Solihull brand introduced this Range Rover Sport back in 2005.

Despite the name, it was Discovery, rather than Range Rover-based, but none the worse for that, with a more tarmac-orientated remit that, astonishingly, still managed to incorporate all of the Disco's legendary ability. The green lobby howled in protest, but customers who Land Rover would otherwise have lost to sporty SUVs like BMW's X5 or Porsche's Cayenne flocked into ownership. Four years on however, initially minor issues like the slightly utilitarian cabin and the lethargic entry-level 2.7-litre diesel engine were becoming more significant and both were duly solved by the improved version we're looking at here.

Driving Experience

Is it sporty? Well if it isn't now, it's never going to be. This car's combination of air springs, active anti-roll bars and electronically-controlled damping have always produced a firm-on-the road experience justified by its extraordinary composure on the kind of back routes that would once have required sickbags if you were pressing on in a large SUV. Now it's even better, thanks to fine-tuning of the chassis and an active damping system that, in conjunction with the air suspension, can make calculations about road and driving conditions over 300 times a second. There are also massive Brembo brakes that manage to bring this 2.5-tonne monster from rest to 100mph and back to rest again in just 15 seconds.

That's if you're at the wheel of the amazing 503bhp 5.0-litre V8 Supercharged Sport model with its awesome 625Nm of torque, the only petrol option on offer to Range Rover Sport buyers and good for 62mph from rest in just five seconds if you're quick with the steering wheel paddles that many will want to control the slicker-shifting 6-speed automatic gearbox. That kind of performance is nice to have but in the real world, most buyers will end up behind the wheel of one of the two diesel models. The original entry-level 188bhp 2.7-litre V6 diesel option was rightly ignored by many buyers who, rightly concluding it was anything but 'sporty', went for the 272bhp TDV8. These days, the choice isn't quite as clear-cut, with V6 diesel power now provided by an altogether transformed 243bhp 3.0-litre unit with 29% more power and 36% more torque that's now probably the pick of the range.

Like the Discovery, the Range Rover Sport features Land Rover's unique 'Integrated Body Frame' twin chassis technology, giving ladder chassis-strength for off roading and a unitary body for luxury saloon-style cruising. That being the case, we probably shouldn't be surprised that this car is as good as it is off road but it's still a shock to be able to be able to keep up with a GTi on a twisting country road, then veer off to conquer the kind of off road terrain you couldn't even walk through.

It all comes courtesy of air springs capable of raising or lowering the car by over 10cm, a low ratio transfer case, hill descent control and, best of all, the brilliant Terrain Response System. You simply switch the rotary knob to whichever of the settings best describes the land you're on - and leave the car to do the rest. There's a general driving programme plus one for slippery conditions (dubbed 'Grass/Gravel/Snow') and three specialist off road modes ('Mud and Ruts', 'Sand', 'Rock Crawl'). The improved system also includes a 'Dynamic' mode, designed to optimise performance on the road with sharper steering and firmer suspension with enhanced body control

Design and Build

Whether you like the look of a Range Rover Sport will have a big impact on whether you'll want to buy one. Like the Range Rover Stormer concept car on which it was originally based, it's dramatic, purposeful and very in-your-face, especially now. This improved version features these piercing LED front lights and a restyled aluminium mesh front grille above a larger air intake that helps the powerful engines breathe.

More important however, are the changes to the cabin, lately improved with over 1,500 fresh parts. Once very Discovery-like, it's now more closely aligned with plusher Range Rover motoring, though the sloping centre console creates a more cocooned, cockpit-orientated feel. This and the plentiful use of soft plastics and lovely stitched leather should certainly make owners feel better about the fat cheque they'll be expected to sign, especially when the cabin is bathed in lovely mood lighting at night. It's certainly a much more luxurious, higher-end place to spend your time. The smart touchscreen display you'll find on the centre console helps here, removing some of the buttons previously dotted around the dash. A neat display screen is also included on the instrument cluster, giving an at-a-glance rundown of key information for the driver.

The great high-set seating that offers such a commanding view and keeps kids quiet on longer journeys is designed for four in comfort and five if you must, though getting in and out of the back is somewhat impeded by the huge bite the rear wheelarches take out of the back door openings. There's a decently-sized 958-litre boot though, and a separately-opening rear screen so you can drop in smaller items without having the open the whole tailgate. Fold the rear seats and there's 2013 litres.

Market and Model

Combining arguably the world's most prolific off road ability with cutting edge SUV on road handling isn't a cheap proposition, so you won't be surprised to find list prices likely to put you Range Rover Sport purchase somewhere in the £45,000-£65,000 bracket. It's some comfort that comparable versions of obvious sporting SUV rivals like BMW's X5 and Porsche's Cayenne are priced at about the same level.

Whether you go for the six or eight cylinder diesels or the supercharged V8 petrol model, equipment is not in short supply at any level of the Range Rover Sport model range. All variants get alloy wheels, Dynamic Stability Control, a diesel misfuel protection device, touch-screen hard-disc drive navigation with a 4x4 interface and voice control, a nine-speaker harman/kardon audio system, an iPod/USB connectivity module, a Bluetooth phone system, and leather seat facings.

Cost of Ownership

There's only so much you can do to reduce the running costs of a vehicle that tips the scales at over two and a half tonnes - more even than the Range Rover and almost twice the weight of a family hatch. Still, Land Rover has had its attention focused on environmental issues in recent times and the Range Rover Sport is reaping the benefits in its own relative way. The engines are undeniably efficient for their size and power outputs, considering they're fitted to a vehicle of the Sport's size and capability. The combined fuel economy for the 3.0-litre diesel engine is over 30mpg and that comes with CO2 emissions of 243g/km. Respective figures for the TDV8 diesel are 25mpg and 294g/km. The 5.0-litre engine is predictable less thrifty, managing only 19mpg, with 348g/km emissions. Residuals aren't bad, suggesting that a three year old model with 30,000 miles would fetch 60% of its original value.

Summary

If you're after a car that really can deliver excitement on the road and ultimate capability off it, the Range Rover Sport is one of the best places you can start your search. Though now plusher, faster and more efficient, it's still a car that's hard to justify but very easy to like. Which come to think of it applies to many of the very best things in life. For you, this may be one of them.

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