Black Range Rover 2023

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General Information

About vehicle

Vehicle typeNew car

TransmissionAutomatic

Fuel typeSuperPlus

Power transmission-

ColorBlack

Mileage17 km

Power530 ps

Displacement4.395 cm³

Number of seats5

Number of gears9

Number of doors5

Fuel Consumption (comb.)11 l/100 km*

CO² emissions265 g/km

CO₂ Efficiency Rating

Additional Information

vehicle Equipment

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Vehicle Description

NEW RANGE ROVER MY2023 * V8 PETROL 4.4 * 530PS * BLACK / BROWN * CAR IN ORDER * EXPORT TAX FREEPlease contact sales manager directly: +49 172 857 45 03 WhatsApp /Mobile / Viber / SMS call back.+49 571 398 00 114 office.

EXTERIOR:Paint: SANTORINI BLACK

Shadow Pack

Wheels: 23inch, Gloss BlackINTERIOR:Caraway semi-aniline leather Seats

Caraway semi-aniline leather

Gloss Grand Black Piano Lacquer finishes

OTHER EQUIPMENT:Rear Entertainment Multimedia (11.4" displays)

Sliding Panoramic Roof

Digital LED headlights with LED signature and projection

Meridian Signature-Reference-Soundsystem

Socket in the baggage area

SV Bespoke Leder-Dachhimmel in Duo-Tone Ebony / Caraway

Control Elements in Noble Chrome

Extended SV Bespoke Leather Pack 2

Laminated glass front and rear side windows

Windscreen heated

and more...

Please contact sales manager directly: +49 172 857 45 03 Mobile/WhatsApp/Viber/SMS call back.IMPORTANT: Visit only by prior appointment / WICHTIG: Besichtigung nur nach vorheriger Vereinbarung.OTHER EXCLUSIVE CARS ARE IN REQUEST POSSIBLE.

UPDATE 10/12/22: This article has been updated with test results for mechanically identical short- and long-wheelbase 2022 models.

A strange thing happened multiple times while we were piloting the new Land Rover Range Rover on a beautiful selection of winding two-lane roads that meander through Northern California's wine country and along its scenic Pacific coast. We're not sure why, but when we invariably came upon a slower vehicle, they promptly found a turnout and moved out of the way within a couple of corners. This never happens.

It's not as if we were tailgating or flashing our lights, and our SUV wasn't painted black and white with a light bar on top. Sure, the new Range Rover is easy to hustle along at a good clip and there was a certain closing rate involved, but in our experience the usual reaction is to patently ignore the desires of those behind and stay put until they're good and ready—especially if they're holding up just one vehicle.

Perhaps the new Range Rover looks impressive in a rearview mirror, and they wished to take a gander. That's certainly the case when it's parked, because there's a simple elegance to the flowing shape of the new Range Rover that stands in direct opposition to some of the more gimmicky new vehicles of late. Its proportions and roofline are unmistakably Range Rover, but there's a precision to the execution that makes it appear to be a design study brought to life. Smooth lines flow along its flanks, barely interrupted by gentle curves and subtle creases.

It's a design that demands a precision build, so considerable effort has been put into tightening flushness tolerances and slimming panel gaps. Our favorite such detail might just be the way the body sides roll through 90 degrees to meet the side glass with no chamfer, crease, or molding. We also like how the taillights appear to be black accents until they're illuminated, at which point they reveal themselves for what they are. The overall shape is as pleasing to the air as it is to the eye, with a remarkable (for an SUV) 0.30 coefficient of drag.

Both the standard (SWB) and long-body (LWB) versions have had their wheelbases stretched by some three inches: from 115.0 to 118.0 inches in the case of the former and 122.9 to 125.9 for the latter. The result is a welcome 1.1-inch increase in rear-seat legroom for the SWB (1.2 inches for the LWB) and an extra six cubic feet of cargo space behind the second row. Critically, the stretched LWB now allows Land Rover to offer three-row seating for the first time. Proportions remain familiar, though, because tidier overhangs limit the overall length increase to just 2.0 inches, and larger 32-inch tires nicely fill out the subtly enlarged fender openings.

Underneath, the rear suspension has been changed from an "integral link" multilink with a complex lower arm to a true five-link setup. The benefits are twofold and significant. The setup makes rear-wheel steering possible, and this new feature (which is standard) chops some five feet off the turning radius despite the elongated wheelbases. A new long-body Rover can hang a U-turn in just 37.9 feet, a maneuver that required 42.8 feet in the outgoing LWB machine and 40.5 in the old SWB model. A new SWB Range Rover can do the deed in just 35.9 feet, which is only 1.5 feet shy of a two-door Jeep Wrangler.

The new multilink setup also consumes less inboard packaging space where the links attach, a crucial attribute that allows for the fitment of a transverse electric motor in a full battery-electric (BEV) version. The longer wheelbase also comes into play with the size of the all-important underfloor battery, but such specifics won't be revealed until later. We know a bit more about how this affects the soon-to-be-released plug-in hybrid (PHEV) model, which has a significantly enlarged 31.8-kWh battery that will enable an expected EPA range rating of 48 miles instead of the outgoing one's near-useless 19 miles.

Until those plug-ins arrive, two gasoline engines are available. The P400 is a supercharged and turbocharged 3.0-liter inline-six, which carries over from last year. As before, it makes 395 horsepower and 406 pound-feet of torque and is paired with an eight-speed automatic. The combination moves out smartly and smoothly, even when motivating the seven-passenger long-wheelbase SE. Our test sample hustled to 60 mph in just 5.5 seconds, which only falls short of the BMW X7 iDrive40 by a tenth of a second, which is something of a miracle because our Rover's 5932-pound curb weight represents nearly 600 pounds more mass than the BMW.

Where the mass really shows up is in limit cornering, which is arguably not much of a concern to those hauling a carful of passengers. The three-row Rover twirls around the skidpad to the tune of a respectable 0.74 g, with the lighter X7 earning 0.81 g. The same mass relationship does not track with the duo's 70-mph stopping distances, a metric that has much more relevance to family-hauler safety. Here the Range Rover's impressive 175-foot stop eclipses the BMW's 184 feet.

The P530 twin-turbo V-8 is a new offering, designed and built by BMW to Land Rover specifications. Changes made for Range Rover duty include a higher intake tract that enables 35.4 inches of water-fording depth and a reworked sump that won't oil-starve the engine during extreme forward, back, or sideways off-road driving angles. The P530 cranks out 523 horsepower and 553 pound-feet of torque, and it delivers its smooth rush of thrust through an eight-speed automatic. We measured a 60-mph sprint of 4.3 seconds on the way to a 12.8-second quarter-mile dash, and Land Rover says it's good for towing 8200 pounds. At the model's introduction, we noted that the P530 delivers a refined growl when you stand on it that fades appropriately into the background when you achieve cruising speed. This was borne out during track testing, where its 75-decibel wide-open growl settled to 66 decibels when cruising at 70 mph.

Relative to the outgoing model, EPA-estimated fuel economy is up from 20 to 21 mpg combined (18 city/26 highway) for the P400 on the strength of a 3-mpg increase in highway fuel economy that owes much to slippery aerodynamics. The P530 V-8 is understandably thirstier at 18 mpg combined (16 city/21 highway). Curiously, both the P400 and the P530 cruised through our 75-mph highway test loop at an identical 23 mpg, an expected result for the inline-six but an outstanding achievement for the V-8.

Northern California's meandering two-lanes are always being reshaped by earth movement, and the Range Rover handled them admirably. In Comfort mode, the air-sprung chassis tended toward float, but in an intentional, stately Range Rover way that could be firmed up by setting the Bilstein adaptive dampers to Dynamic mode. Either way, body motions were far more controlled than before, particularly in roll, where the new fast-acting active anti-roll-bar system can offer counteracting torque to flatten curves and then appropriately limp on wavy straightaways to combat head toss. But this didn't hold quite as true on the scalloped-edge sections of our Michigan test loop, where the active anti-roll system couldn't quite keep up.

Inside, the accommodations are as classy as the appearance outside, with straightforward controls and handsome appointments. The Achilles heel was perhaps the infotainment system, but that may be a case of guilt by association because the menu flow looks similar to earlier versions we didn't much care for. To be fair, the functions and camera views we did access through the touchscreen were carried out directly, but it'll take additional interactions and a degree of familiarity to get a better sense of its user-friendliness. We did try out the third-row seat, and it's easy to access with a tip-forward second row that moves in a way that allows you to keep many forward-facing child seats or boosters belted in place. Once inside, headroom is tight if you're six feet tall, but you'll find cupholders, USB-C ports, air-conditioning vents, and seat heaters back there. Land Rover did this part right.

For 2023, the SE is the entry level model, though it hardly feels bare bones. A P400 SE five-seat SWB goes for $105,975, with the long-wheelbase three-row with the same engine going for $111,975. Stepping up to a P530 V-8 in either one costs $18,300. And while we don't know much about how the P440e plug-in hybrid will drive, we do know it'll be an SE five-seater starting at a comparatively reasonable $109,875. Meanwhile, the V-8 is standard in the three Autobiography models that span the mid-$150,000 to low-$160K range. Above that, the First Edition executive four-seaters slot in, and if you want the ultimate chauffeured-limousine experience, you're staring down the barrel of a base price of $219,775 for a long-wheelbase four-place SV.

But that vehicle isn't the one that impresses us most. The brilliance and style of the new Range Rover is apparent even at the SE level with the base P400 powertrain. That's what really moves the Range Rover up the consideration list, along with the new three-row configuration and useful chassis changes that not only make it more livable every day, they also set the stage for relevant plug-in models in the very near future. Get out of the way, Range Rover is coming on through.

Specifications

Specifications

2022 Land Rover Range Rover SE P400 LWB
Vehicle Type: front-engine, 4-wheel-drive, 7-passenger, 4-door wagon

PRICE
Base/As Tested: $111,350/$130,525
Options: Showroom Specification package (Black brake calipers, tailgate event suite w/leather cushions, illuminated treadplates, SV bespoke full extended leather upgrade), $4575; 23-inch diamond-turned wheels, $3800; Charente Grey premium metallic paint, $1950; Caraway semi-aniline leather seats, $1850; heated, cooled, and massaging front seats with heated and vented middle and heated third rows, $1600; head-up display, $1350; Meridian 3D surround sound, $1200; natural brown silver birch veneer, $650; ClearSight interior rear view mirror, $600; configurable programs, $550; open pore wood and leather steering wheel, $550; heated steering wheel, $300; park assist, $200

ENGINE
supercharged, turbocharged, and intercooled DOHC 24-valve inline-6, aluminum block and head, direct fuel injection
Displacement: 183 in3, 2996 cm3
Power: 395 hp @ 6500 rpm
Torque: 406 lb-ft @ 2000 rpm

TRANSMISSION
8-speed automatic

CHASSIS
Suspension, F/R: multilink/multilink
Brakes, F/R: 14.9-in vented disc/13.9-in vented disc
Tires: Pirelli Scorpion Zero All Season PNCS
285/40R-23 111Y M+S LR

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 125.9 in
Length: 206.8 in
Width: 80.6 in
Height: 73.6 in
Passenger Volume: 141 ft3
Cargo Volume: 9 ft3
Curb Weight: 5932 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 5.5 sec
1/4-Mile: 14.2 sec @ 97 mph
100 mph: 14.9 sec
130 mph: 31.2 sec
Results above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.
Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 7.0 sec
Top Gear, 30–50 mph: 4.0 sec
Top Gear, 50–70 mph: 4.3 sec
Top Speed (mfr's claim): 150 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 175 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.74 g

C/D FUEL ECONOMY
Observed: 17 mpg
75-mph Highway Driving: 23 mpg
75-mph Highway Range: 540 mi

EPA FUEL ECONOMY
Combined/City/Highway: 21/18/26 mpg

2022 Land Rover Range Rover First Edition SWB
Vehicle Type: front-engine, 4-wheel-drive, 5-passenger, 4-door wagon

PRICE
Base/As Tested: $159,550/$169,900
Options: Sunset Gold Stain premium paint, $7450; Shadow exterior pack, $1000; Black contrast roof, $1000; 23” gloss black wheels, $900

ENGINE
twin-turbocharged and intercooled DOHC 32-valve V-8, aluminum block and heads, direct fuel injection
Displacement: 268 in3, 4395 cm3
Power: 523 hp @ 6000 rpm
Torque: 553 lb-ft @ 1800 rpm

TRANSMISSION
8-speed automatic

CHASSIS
Suspension, F/R: multilink/multilink
Brakes, F/R: 15.7-in vented disc/14.5-in vented disc
Tires: Pirelli Scorpion Zero All Season PNCS
285/40R-23 111Y M+S LR

DIMENSIONS
Wheelbase: 125.9 in
Length: 206.8 in
Width: 80.6 in
Height: 73.6 in
Passenger Volume: 109 ft3
Cargo Volume: 41 ft3
Curb Weight: 5982 lb

C/D TEST RESULTS
60 mph: 4.3 sec
100 mph: 10.6 sec
1/4-Mile: 12.8 sec @ 109 mph
130 mph: 19.4 sec
150 mph: 30.3 sec
Results above omit 1-ft rollout of 0.3 sec.
Rolling Start, 5–60 mph: 5.1 sec
Top Gear, 30–50 mph: 2.9 sec
Top Gear, 50–70 mph: 3.5 sec
Top Speed (mfr's claim): 155 mph
Braking, 70–0 mph: 185 ft
Braking, 100–0 mph: 373 ft
Roadholding, 300-ft Skidpad: 0.73 g

C/D FUEL ECONOMY
Observed: 16 mpg
75-mph Highway Driving: 23 mpg
75-mph Highway Range: 540 mi

EPA FUEL ECONOMY
Combined/City/Highway: 18/16/21 mpg

C/D TESTING EXPLAINED

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Will the Range Rover change in 2023?

A longer wheelbase at last enables a three-row model and paves the way for a plug-in hybrid with meaningful range as well as a full battery-electric version.

How much are the 2023 Range Rovers?

2023 Land Rover Range Rover Review Price: The Land Rover Range Rover starts at $104,500 for the base P400 SE model.

When can you buy 2023 Range Rover?

2023 Land Rover Range Rover SV Price & Release Date The model is slated to be released in Spring 2022.

What is the difference between 2022 and 2023 Range Rover?

In comparison to the 2022 Range Rover Sport, the flagship 2023 Range Rover is more expensive and more generously equipped. The Range Rover can also be optioned with an extended wheelbase that the Range Rover Sport lacks.

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