When you wait a long time for something, you should be rewarded. That's what happened this week at the LA Auto Show, when Jaguar Land Rover finally and officially revealed its much-anticipated F-Pace crossover SUV in North America.Analysis as seen on yahoo autos.
There
has never been a Jag truck before (the XF Sportbrake station wagon, not
sold in the US, doesn't count). But given the importance of these
vehicles now for luxury automakers, its was overdue. Jag has sedans and
sports cars, but it was lagging behind corporate siblings Land Rover and
Range Rover, which of course sell SUVs and nothing else.
For
anyone who adores the sleek lines of the legendary Jaguar E-Type,
probably the most drop-dead gorgeous automobile ever created, the very
idea of a Jag truck is horrifying. But if you're going to have one, it
should look great.
And
thanks to Jaguar designer Ian Callum, it does. In fact, it looks better
than great. It's easily the most beautiful SUV to (soon) hit the road.
Which is a bit weird. But also understandable. The other car in the Jag stable that should showcase Ian's considerable talent is the F-Type sports car. But I've never liked it very much.
Compared with another Callum design, the Aston Martin DB9 (and before
it, the DB7), the F-Type to my eye comes off as musclebound and thick,
like a thug in an overly tailored suit who needs brag about how much he
just won (or lost) and the craps table.
(Matthew DeBord/Business Insider)
I'm
in a distinct minority here — pretty much everyone else thinks the
F-Type is a glorious set of wheels, poetry in sheet metal.
However,
you can kind of see my point if you study at the F-Pace and see that
same loudmouth thug in a suit that properly envelopes his bulk. The
F-Type is too big. The F-Pace is just right — in its bigness Callum has
found the correct scale to execute on his current vision.
(Wikimedia Commons)
The F-Pace is "the latest expression of Jaguar's passion" Callum said when the car was unveiled this week at the LA Auto Show.
"It's not just a Jaguar you want," he added, "it's a Jaguar you need."
Hubba.
"Even
your kids will think it's cool," Callum quipped, wryly taking aim at a
market that Jaguar has regrettably left untouched during the SUV revival
of the past few years: parents who need to haul around offspring, gear,
pets, and friends of offspring, with their gear and maybe even their
pets.
(Jaguar Land Rover)
For
Jaguar's chief designer, the F-Pace and its equally new sibling in the
Jag family, the XE sedan, a circle has been closed. He said in LA that
15 years ago he had set out to create a portfolio of vehicles for Jaguar
that would be "modern, progressive, and elegant."
His deservedly immodest verdict on his track record over a decade and a half is that he and Jaguar have succeeded.
The
F-Pace makes it tough to argue with that judgment, even given my
reservations about the F-Type. If you ponder the vehicle, you can see
how Callum retained the basic headlight-to-taillight line that defines
the F-Type, a clean, smooth, almost dagger- or sword-like sweep. But for
the F-Pace, he took that line and elevated it, providing the required
sense of ruggedness below, through the crossover's raised heft.
Balancing that is the elegant curve of the roofline.
This
is preposterously beautiful truck. Compare it with the BMW X6 M, a car
of similar scale but far more baffling aesthetics — an angry beast of a
car, bulging and thrusting everywhere:
(Business Insider/Matthew DeBord)
And
unlike the SUVs in Jag's corporate stable, from Land Rover and Range
Rover, the F-Pace eschews a utilitarian, boxy shape for tailoring that's
sleek and sinuous. It looks quick, and it looks quick without too much
effort.
It's
competition, looks-wise, is mainly the Porsche Cayenne, but that
groundbreaking luxury SUV is hampered by optics that have always made
Porsches less lovely, by a long shot, than Jags. The bug-eyed front,
though streamlined in recent decades, can never be fully renounced.
Jags, by contrast, have in their DNA those signature swept-back
headlight pods that much of the auto industry has copied.
So
there you have it. If you want an SUV but have always hated how they
look, the F-Pace has arrived to scratch your itch. And to scratch it
beautifully.
(Porsche)
0 comments:
Post a Comment
What's On Your Mind?