Read + Write + Report
Home | Start a blog | About Orble | FAQ | Blogs | Writers | My Orble | Login

Wheel Fever - by Craig Hill

Rolls-Royce RR4 200EX

February 18th 2009 12:30
The new baby of the Rolls-Royce family is actually a giant.

The only time the 200EX looks small is when it is lined up beside the flagship of the British luxury fleet, the Phantom.

The 200EX, officially only a concept car for the Geneva Motor Show next month but already confirmed as the RR4 for production, is a full 327mm longer than a BMW 7 Series, as well as 46mm wider and 81mm taller.

When you see the RR4 - or 200EX as Rolls-Royce now prefers - the car comes into crisp focus as a potential leader in the $350,000-ish luxury class which is about to become a hotbed of competition with everyone from Bentley to Aston Martin, Lamborghini and Porsche.


Rolls-Royce RR4 200EX


It is clearly a Rolls-Royce, yet much less imposing and formal than the Phantom.

Even the giant chromed grille, a RR signature for generations, has been moved aside and replaced by something which is just as recognisable but far less confrontational.

"This car is for a new group of Rolls-Royce customers. They will be considerably younger than Phantom buyers," says Ian Robertson, chairman of Rolls-Royce and now also head of marketing for the BMW Group in Germany.

He is speaking at an exclusive press preview of RR4, at Goodwood in Britain last September.

I am one of a small group of journalists to see the car before it is confirmed as the 200EX concept and the impact of the car is immediate and surprising. It looks smaller than I expect, and less like a Roller, at least at first.


But as I slide into the back seat, and luxuriate in more space and luxury than a long-wheelbase 7 Series, I can feel that this is something different. The smoother look is good, too.

If only the dreaded iDrive controller, picked up as part of the electronic package from Rolls-Royce's owners in Germany, was not so obvious in the centre console...

There is also a BMW-style shark-fin aerial on the roof as a reminder of the family tie, although Rolls-Royce's chief designer does not see it that way.

"I prefer to think of it as as Rolls-Royce beauty spot," says Ian Cameron.

The 200EX is being unveiled as Rolls-Royce gears up for production in 2010. The factory has already been split, as I see in September, to allow two cars to be built at the same time without disrupting production of a Phantom family which already has four members.

It is the latest in a series of near-production concept cars which have also previewed the Phantom coupe and convertible since Rolls-Royce became part of the BMW Group in 2003.

The big surprise is that it is confirmed with an all-new V12 engine.

The car still has the rear-hinged 'coach' doors used on the Phantom but the design is much more modern, including the grille.

"200EX is a touring saloon with more than a little panache and perhaps more bravado than one might expect," says Cameron.

"We wanted this to be less reminiscent of the traditional 'Parthenon' style and more like a jet intake."

The bottom line, says Rolls-Royce's chief executive Tom Purves, is simple.

"200EX is a modern execution of timeless Rolls-Royce elegance, breaking with some areas of tradition but retaining the core values that make our marque unique," he says.

But there is one thing Rolls-Royce is not talking about - a name.

The car is being shown as the 200EX at Geneva, and internally it is known as RR4, but it will be called something different for production.

It could be a traditional name, like Silver Cloud or Wraith, but no-one at Rolls-Royce is giving any hints and there is strong talk that - like the car - the name will be completely new.

News of the 200EX comes as Rolls-Royce makes some minor revisions to the Phantom for 2009.

There is a streamlined front bumper that is closer to the design of the Phantom Coupe and Drophead, finished in stainless steel.

The car also gets 21-inch alloy wheels, LED illumination for the door handles, new door cappings with grab handles and double reading lamps for the rear seats. There is other stuff but it is very minor.

Rolls-Royce says it sold 1212 Phantom series cars in 2008, the best for the brand in 18 years, and that it has recently spent $100 million on its factory at Goodwood in preparation for production of the RR4 in 2010.

Herald Sun

29
Vote
   


Jaguar XF

January 29th 2009 08:01
Nothing has done more for Jaguar in Australia recently than the breakthrough XF.

Sales of the British brand have jumped by eight per cent since the all- new, mid-sized XF arrived in 2008 and now it is going to get its own boost.

The kick comes from the supercharged 5-litre V8 engine in the flagship XFR which was unveiled at the Detroit Motor Show ahead of local sales in the second half of the year.

The XF is the latest Cat to get the R-car treatment and the pattern is predictable and positive: a major engine upgrade, body bits, bigger wheels and brakes, and some mild tweaking in the cabin.

The R-car work has already done the job for Jaguar's XK sports cars and the flagship XJ and the company is expecting a solid response in Australia.

Jaguar XF


"One of the problems we've had in the past is under-calling the demand for the R models. With the XK, around 65 to 70 per cent of demand is for the R," says David Blackall, the managing director of Jaguar Land Rover Australia.

"So the R cars have done well in Australia. People tend to gravitate to the best, particularly when they are paying for a Jaguar."

The starting price for an XF in Australia is now $108,350 with a V6 engine, but jumping all the way to the XFR is going to mean close to double the price. And that is likely to keep the car exclusive.

"The car is probably going to be around $200,00 and we reckon if we can do 25 it will be a good result," says Blackall.

"In Normal times I would like to sell 50, so with the market the way it is hope to do 25 to the end of the year. In any case, we want to keep it as exclusive as we can."

Blackall is also concerned to keep demand for the XF SV8, which comes with a 4.2-litre V8 at $173,170, moving along until the R-car hits.

"A lot of this is going to depend on how quickly we can get the XFR.

We've still got some SV8s, although not too many now.

"We are targeting around the middle of the year for the R."

The XFR was shown in Detroit with trendy white bodywork, which does not look nearly as tough as the jet-black colour normally used for Jaguar's hero cars.

But there was a matt-black XFR on the back of the stand which had just returned from a record run on the Bonneville salt-flats in the USA, where it was clocked at 363km/h to become the fastest car in the company's history. Of course, it had some tweaking . . .

The production XFR has 375 kiloWatts from its supercharged and direct- injection V8, as well as 624 Newton-metres of torque. If the numbers sound a little familiar, they match the output of the V10-powered BMW M5.

Power is fed to the rear end through a six-speed automatic gearbox with a new active differential, with the car's electronic controls including a 'drift' setting for a little rear-end slide.

Body changes run from the predictable front air dam and rear spoiler to the R cars' signature chrome mesh grille, with extra bonnet vents to cool the engine.

The XFR has been dropped 27 millimetres lower than the SV8 with Bilstein suspension, upgraded brakes and four exhaust tips under the tail.

Inside, the seats have more side support, there is upgraded trim and some R-car logos, as well as the acoustic laminated windscreen and upgraded satnav common to the latest XF range.

The bottom line on the go-faster XF is a car that has 23 per cent more power and 12 per cent more torque than its 4.2-litre V8 predecessor.

That means it jumps to 100km/h in just 4.7 seconds and has to be held back to a top speed of 250km/h.

But Jaguar's good news for '09 does not end with the XFR because the company is also into the countdown for its all-new luxury XJ model.

It is expected to be previewed at the Frankfurt Motor Show in October with deliveries in Australia from early in 2010.

But Blackall is not giving anything away.

"The car is on track. There will be northern hemisphere announcements at the right time," he says.

"Given the state of the world, the quicker we can get it into showrooms the better for Jaguar."

Herald Sun

23
Vote
   


Paladin's Blogs

9647 Vote(s)
109 Comment(s)
146 Post(s)
2508 Vote(s)
79 Comment(s)
32 Post(s)
Moderated by Paladin
Copyright © 2006 2007 2008 On Topic Media PTY LTD. All Rights Reserved. Design by Vimu.com.
On Topic Media ZPages: Sydney |  Melbourne |  Brisbane |  London |  Birmingham |  Leeds     [ Advertise ] [ Contact Us ] [ Privacy Policy ]