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2014 (14) Land Rover Range Rover Evoque 2.2 SD4 Pure 5dr Auto [9] [Tech Pack]

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Featured specification

Standard specification

Driver Convenience

Bluetooth telephone connectivityCruise control
Drive select with paddle shift and sport modeDynamic route guidance
EPASFront parking aid
HDD Premium navigation, audio server and CD storagePush button starter
Rear parking aidService interval indicator
Trip computerVoice control system

Engine/Drivetrain/Suspension

Diesel particulate filterTerrain Response

Entertainment

Audio Connectivity SystemAuxiliary Audio Jack
DAB Digital radioSteering wheel mounted audio/cruise controls
USB connection 

Exterior Features

Automatic headlamp activationBody coloured bumpers
Brunel tailgate finishHeated rear windscreen
Heated windscreenHeated windscreen washers
Power front/rear windows with global closeRain sensor windscreen wipers
Rear spoilerRear wiper
Trailer stability assist 

Interior Features

12V power point front12V power point in luggage area
3 seat rear bench60/40 split folding rear seat
Auto climate control with air filtrationAuxiliary heater
Centre console storage with lidDriver/passenger sunvisors and illuminated vanity mirrors
Footwell illuminationFront centre armrest
Front head restraintsHeight/reach adjustable steering column
Illuminated gloveboxInterior mood lighting
Isofix child seat preparationLashing points
Leather steering wheelLeather upholstery
Luggage compartment lightingLuggage cover
Proximity sensing and touch detection for overhead map lightsRear centre armrest with 2 cupholders
Rear centre head restraintRear headrests

Passive Safety

3 rear 3 point seatbeltsABS
Driver and passenger airbagsDrivers knee airbag
Electronic parking brakeFront seatbelt pretensioners with force limiters
Front side airbags with curtain airbagsHeight adjustable front seatbelts
Hill descent controlHill start assist
Roll stability controlSeatbelt warning
Traction control 

Security

AlarmImmobiliser
Locking wheel nutsRemote central locking

Trim

Satin brushed aluminium inserts
The vehicle information above was correct at time of manufacture. Please speak to the dealership for full current specification.

Technical specification

Emissions - ICE

CO2 (g/km)159Standard Euro EmissionsEURO 5

Engine and Drive Train

CamshaftDOHCCatalytic ConvertorTrue
CC2179Compression Ratio15.8:1
Cylinder LayoutIN-LINECylinders4
Cylinders - Bore (mm)85Cylinders - Stroke (mm)96
Engine LayoutFRONT TRANSVERSEFuel DeliveryCOMMON RAIL
Gears9 SPEEDNumber of Valves16
TransmissionAUTO 

Fuel Consumption - ICE

EC Combined (mpg)47.1EC Directive 1999/100/EC AppliesTrue
EC Extra Urban (mpg)53.3EC Urban (mpg)39.2

General

Badge Engine CC2.2Badge Power190
Coin DescriptionSD4 [9]Coin SeriesPure [Tech Pack]
Generation Mark1Insurance Group 1 - 50 Effective January 0732E
Manufacturers Corrosion Perforation Guarantee - Years6Manufacturers Paintwork Guarantee - Years3
NCAP Adult Occupant Protection %86NCAP Child Occupant Protection %75
NCAP Overall Rating - Effective February 095NCAP Pedestrian Protection %41
NCAP Safety Assist %86Service Interval Frequency - Months12
Service Interval Mileage16000Standard manufacturers warranty - Mileage999999
Standard manufacturers warranty - Years3Timing Belt Interval Frequency - Months108
Timing Belt Interval Mileage144000Vehicle Homologation ClassM1

Performance

0 to 60 mph (secs)True0 to 62 mph (secs)8
Engine Power - BHP190Engine Power - KW140
Engine Power - PSTrueEngine Power - RPM3500
Engine Torque - LBS.FT310Engine Torque - MKG42.8
Engine Torque - NM420Engine Torque - RPM1750
Top Speed121 

Tyres

Alloys?TrueTyre Size Front235/60 R18
Tyre Size Rear235/60 R18Tyre Size SpareTYRE REPAIR KIT
Wheel StyleSTYLE 11Wheel Type18" ALLOY

Vehicle Dimensions

Height1635Height (including roof rails)1640
Length4365Wheelbase2660
Width1900Width (including mirrors)2125

Weight and Capacities

Fuel Tank Capacity (Litres)60Gross Vehicle Weight2350
Luggage Capacity (Seats Down)1445Luggage Capacity (Seats Up)575
Max. Loading Weight665Max. Roof Load75
Max. Towing Weight - Braked1800Max. Towing Weight - Unbraked750
Minimum Kerbweight1685No. of Seats5
Turning Circle - Kerb to Kerb11.3
The vehicle information above was correct at time of manufacture. Please speak to the dealership for full current specification.

Independent review

Review courtesy of Car and Driving

Land Rover Range Rover Evoque

By Jonathan Crouch

Introduction

Finding the right mix of ingredients in the right proportions to make a convincing baby Range Rover was never going to be an easy task, but with this Evoque, the British brand completed it in style. This is more than a fashion statement too, thanks to Freelander underpinnings and tough Land Rover know-how forged in the world's toughest environments. With low running costs, cutting edge design and on-road driving dynamics previously unknown in the SUV sector, this car proved to be a sensation when it was new - and deservedly so. But does it stack up as a used buy?

History

It's getting on for half a century since all-wheel driving was revolutionised by the Range Rover, a car now a class apart in the luxury 4x4 sector. But what would that car look like re-invented in smaller form for very different Millennial times, an age in which fashion and frugality are as important as toughness and traction? Something like this we think, the Range Rover Evoque. At its launch in 2011, this car provided a watershed moment for the Land Rover brand every bit as important as the arrival of the original Range Rover in 1970, the Discovery in 1989 and the Freelander in 1997. To survive, the marque realised that it must reach new customers by radically changing brand perceptions dating all the way back to the Forties when company founder Maurice Wilks first sketched the original model in the sand at Red Wharf Bay in Angelsey. They did with this Evoque. Land Rover's founders would have relished the challenge presented by the concept behind this car. Luxurious room for four in a shape shorter than a Ford Focus. Handling as satisfying as a sports coupe. And economy to rival a 1.2-litre Fiat 500 citycar. All to be delivered with class-leading off road expertise.. In a car right for its times. Quite a build-up. Quite a car? Let's find out. Here, we'll look at the 2011 to 2015 era models sold before the new-era Ingenium engines were introduced in 2015.

What You Get

Not many cars make it from concept Motorshow prototype to production reality without being significantly watered down - but this is one of them. We first saw what was then called the LRX in 2008 and it's as arresting to look at now as it was back then. You know from a glance that it's a Land Rover, though to begin with, it's hard to pin down exactly why. Here's the kind of fantasy distortion you might see in a kids' comic, all big wheels, bloated wheelarches and impossibly shallow side window work. Boxiness is banished, as is the kind of bluff front end that gives a conventional Range Rover the aerodynamic efficiency of your average garden shed. Under the skin, around 30% of the underpinnings are Freelander-based, a car that's 100kgs heavier partly because it's slightly longer. At 4.35m, this Evoque is intentionally compact, only slightly longer than a Volkswagen Golf. But it just looks right, with a shape that works wherever - on paper, in the showroom - on the Kings Road. Where it can't possibly work, you think before opening the door, is on the inside. With such a narrow glasshouse, claustrophobia must surely reign across the cabin. And anyway, how will you reverse the thing peering back through that letterbox-sized rear window? And what will roundabouts be like with those huge mirrors obstructing front three-quarter vision? All very good questions. For which, as it turns out, Gerry McGovern and his design team have styled some surprisingly effective answers. Sitting at the wheel, it isn't that your fears are groundless. You do, after all, really need the standard reverse parking sensors. The high flanks can make this car tricky to place in a tight spot. And the large mirrors do slightly impede your vision at junctions. But none of it's enough to really affect day-to-day usability. You work around it because you want to. Because going back to boxiness after owning one of these would be almost unthinkable. Even at the rear, the space is surprising - not only given the rakish roofline but also the fact that this car is shorter than a Ford Focus. True, in the three-door 'Coupe' version, the back seats aren't that easy to get at and once you're in them, headroom's at a premium. But it's still a different world from the cramped rear conditions of the kind of GT or sports coupe that many customers will be graduating from. Anyway, those likely to be religiously using the rear seats have a perfect excuse to buy the five-door version which stands some 30mm taller. Here, especially with the optional full-length panoramic glass roof fitted, a couple of back seat adults will be very comfortable on all but the longest journeys. But not, as you'd expect, as comfortable as those up-front. If this is indeed an SUV, it's the most car-like one yet devised in terms of driving position. No one will struggle to get comfortable here and all will be impressed by the tactile quality of the fixtures and fittings that surround them - which is just as well at the high prices being asked. Glistening switches and dials from pricier Range Rover models are surveyed from beautifully upholstered sports seats. Top models use no less than 10sqm of leather to trim their cabins and there are lovely design touches like the way that the rotary gear selector on automatic models glides up into your palm from start-up and the Volvo-style empty space behind the rising centre console. Most importantly perhaps, it all appears to have been beautifully screwed together in the Merseyside factory. As for luggage room, well it's a pity the styling wouldn't permit the fitment of that signature Range Rover feature, the two-piece tailgate, but lift the composite plastic rear door and you'll find that there's 550-litres of space on offer in the Coupe version, a figure that rises marginally to 575-litres in the five-door model. Enough to take a set of golf clubs without long clubs having to be removed from the bag. These are larger dimensions than you might expect the compact dimensions to deliver, though it's a pity that they've been achieved at the expense of providing a proper spare wheel. If you need more room, you can of course push forward the split-folding rear seats and these figures rise to 1350 and 1445-litres respectively.

What to Look For

Few problems have been reported so far. The only issues we have found amongst owners have been minor things - warning lights coming on, smart keys not working and so on - issues which have been quickly dealt with by dealers. Although the Evoque is pretty capable in the rough stuff, it's nowhere near as sturdy as a bigger Land Rover model. For a start, it lacks a low-range transfer case, so it is possible to get yourself a bit stuck if you get too keen with your off-roading ambitions, so check the car over for signs of underbody damage. The SD4 diesel engine is a tried and tested piece of kit, its lineage being traced right back to the Peugeot/Citroën DW engine series that was used by Ford and marketed as a Duratorq in 2008. If you're test driving the car on a cold day, don't be afraid if the Stop/Start system fails to kick in. The engine is programmed to keep running at temperatures below three degrees Celsius.

Replacement Parts

(based on 2014 Evoque SD4 - approx excl. VAT) An air filter will be around £45 and an auxiliary drive belt is £15. An oil filter elements is £7 and tyres are around £145 a corner.

On the Road

You normally know pretty much what you're going to get at the wheel of a Land Rover product. Not here you don't. The rakish roofline suggests you'll be driving a sporting, coupe-like car - in contrast to the way that the high waistline and huge wheels promise the commanding driving position of a tough 4x4. In the event, you find behind the wheel that it's a kind of combination between the two, with the seat set high but the driving position angled and purposeful. But can that same mix of SUV and sportscar be achieved out on the road? First impressions are good. This Evoque may be based on Freelander underpinnings, but it feels very different to drive. How different? Well, Land Rover's engineers wanted hot hatch and coupe drivers to be able to jump into this car and feel at home. They will - though to what extent will depend on two factors. It might, after all, be a little hard to feel too sporty in a 1.6-tonne car powered by a 2.2-litre turbodiesel with just 150bhp, though to be fair, such an entry-level Evoque does manage sixty from rest in 10.3s on the way to 115mph. That's with 4WD: there's also an eco-conscious eD4 2WD model on offer that's fractionally slower. Equally critical for road raciness is the need to spend an extra £1,100 on the magnetorheological adaptive damping system able to adjust the car's demeanour to the road you're on and the mood you're in. Even in the 'Normal' setting, body roll is well controlled through tight corners, but switch to 'Sport' and things are noticeably flatter with firmer steering response too. Opt for either of the pokier mainstream engines on offer and you can make the most of it too. 4WD is the only option here whether, as most customers will, you choose the SD4 model which uses the 2.2-litre diesel in 190bhp tune via manual or auto transmission. Or you take the bold step of choosing the automatic Si4 petrol model, which uses the rousing 240bhp 2.0-litre Ecoboost turbo unit you'll find in a Ford Focus ST hot hatch, an engine that here will fire you from rest to sixty in just over seven seconds if you're quick with the standard steering wheel gearshift paddles. Use all of that performance and yes, on a twisting country road driving at the limit, there are differences between this Evoque and a really good GTi or sports coupe. The surprise here though is in how marginal these differences are - and how little you notice them in ordinary motoring. In contrast, the benefits of this Range Rover over other trendy choices - a pokier MINI, an Audi TT or a racier VW Scirocco for instance - in extra style and space will be appreciated every day. And of course, cars like these that are merely sporting will have no chance of getting you off the beaten track. Can an Evoque do that? Fears that this Land Rover might prioritise style over substance vanish the first time you hit the dirt. Lacking the ground clearance and air suspension of larger Range Rovers, there are limitations of course, but you'd have to be doing something quite extreme to find them thanks to the fitment of Land Rover's much admired Terrain Response System. You simply set the dial in front of the gearstick to suit the ground you're on and let the car do the rest. As a result, there's almost nothing a Freelander could do that would defeat this Evoque, so it'll take four foot-high water and 45-degree slopes in its stride. Which consequently puts this car as far ahead of conventional compact 4x4 rivals like BMW's X3 and Audi's Q5 off road as it is on tarmac. Not that you'll ever see this car off road. Spattering all that glamorous panelwork with mud looks rather incongruous - which is why we couldn't wait to do it.

Overall

In years to come, the Evoque will be seen as a turning point for Land Rover. Other SUVs have pioneered more car-like handling but ultimately, they've still been SUVs, both to drive and to look at. This model is different. In all the ways that matter - space, off road ability, that commanding driving position - it's a 4x4. Just as in all the ways that also matter - efficiency, cutting edge style and driving pleasure - it very definitely isn't. Contradictory qualities we've been waiting for all too long from a car of this kind. That Land Rover has delivered them in a machine so fashionable, relevant and clever marks this Evoque out as a very desirable thing indeed, even at the expensive prices being asked. If you can afford one and you can afford not to be too sensible in your choice of car, you won't be disappointed.

Performance
80%
Handling
90%
Comfort
80%
Space
80%
Styling
100%
Build
90%
Value
80%
Equipment
90%
Economy
90%
Depreciation
90%
Insurance
70%

This vehicle is fitted with a Particulate Filter. Vehicles with a Particulate Filter driven at low speeds in urban traffic can require periodic trips at higher speeds to clear out the filter.

* Depending on the age of the vehicle, MPG and CO2 may be quoted using either NEDC or WLTP testing standards.  Find out more

Figures are provided for comparison purposes. Fuel consumption under real world driving conditions and the CO2 produced will depend upon a number of factors, including any accessories fitted after registration, variations in driving styles, weather conditions and vehicle load.

Edinburgh Sighthill Citroën / DS

8 Bankhead Drive, Sighthill, Edinburgh, EH11 4EW

Phone Number

Call now on 0131 378 2648**

** Calls may be recorded for quality or training purposes.

  • Land Rover Range Rover Evoque - 2.2 SD4 Pure 5dr Auto [9] [Tech Pack]
  • SA14EWX
  • GBP
  • 12498
  • 82356 miles, Edinburgh Sighthill Citroën / DS