Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
Auto

2018 Land Rover Discovery

By Benjamin Yong, 22 May, 2018
  • 2018 Land Rover Discovery

Luxury SUV receives radical redesign

 
 
 
Highlights:
 
MSRP(as tested): $65,900    
Motor: 3.0-litre turbocharged V6 diesel
Horsepower: 254 @ 3,750 rpm  
Torque (lb-ft): 443 @ 1,750 rpm   
Gearbox: Eight-speed automatic   
Layout: Front engine, all-wheel drive   
Fuel economy: 18.9 L/100 km mixed city/highway (observed)
 
 
When a vehicle enters its next generation, the evolution from one platform to the next can be subtle or significant. In the case of the new fifth-gen Land Rover Discovery, it’s definitely the latter, and then some. The British automaker has taken the cult classic and softened a few lines, infused the latest technology and all the while keeping an aesthetic that should appeal to diehard fans and newcomers alike. 
 
“New Discovery redefines the large SUV. Land Rover’s design and engineering teams have revolutionised the Discovery DNA to create a highly desirable, extremely versatile and hugely capable premium SUV. We truly believe the result is a radical departure in design that will introduce the Discovery Family to a new, wider customer base,” says Land Rover’s chief designer Gerry McGovern.
 
 
Certain characteristic exterior elements have survived the overhaul: the angular A-pillars and that flat, boxy roofline prevalent throughout the lineage. Everything else, however, either improves on prior concepts or breaks the mould entirely. Looking at the body, it’s as though Land Rover smoothed over the entire surface, creating a slippery 0.35 drag coefficient in the process.
 
The headlamps undergo one of the most drastic changes becoming a sliver of their former selves, although they haven’t been slimmed down quite as much as the units on the Evoque. Inside, curved LED Daylight Running Lights (DRL) show off the modern signature pattern. 
 
 
The metal mesh grille is nearly equally as skinny, not reaching down far past the bottom edge of the light housings. The side of the SUV borrows a few items from its smaller sibling, the Discovery Sport, namely the notched contrasting wheel arch flares that connect to the rest of the blackened lower bodywork.
 
Perhaps the biggest alteration occurs at the back. For the first time, Land Rover has done away with a two-piece tailgate, opting for a cleaner single-panel unit yielding a larger opening for luggage as well as more effective shelter during inclement weather. A powered cargo floor extension is included that, folded out, prevents scratches to the bodywork when loading and unloading, and acts as a handy seat to boot.
 
 
In-between the horizontally stretched out LED tail lamps lies an asymmetrical license plate recess. An emblem is inset into the narrow portion, and the plate is installed in the wider end. Seeing as how this is at the core a go-anywhere vehicle, the InControl Touch Pro infotainment system inside displays a lot more than just audio and GPS information. A graphical representation of the suspension and differential articulation is shown on the widescreen touch-sensitive monitor in real time and adjustments can be made on the fly. 
 
Should you decide to take your $63,000-plus purchase off-roading, the Disco has 282 millimetres of ground clearance – 43 more than the LR4. In other words, obstacles such as logs, ruts or rocks don’t pose much of a challenge. The SUV features Terrain Response 2 technology, optimizing traction for different environments like gravel, sand, snow, mud and so on. The real beauty of the system is the automatic setting, able to switch modes on its own when the multitude of onboard sensors detects changes in surface conditions. Even just driving on twisty, icy roads wearing M+S tires, I never once felt any real slippage.
 
 
There are seven seats in the cabin, all endlessly configurable using automatic switches. Smartphone savvy users can also download the companion app and play with the positioning remotely on their mobile device. Note: like most seven-passenger vehicles, when the back bench is upright, there is very little storage capacity leftover. On a shopping trip, we struggled to fit even a few bags behind the third row. 
 
The all-new Land Rover Discovery is sold in three trim levels – SE, HSE/HSE Td6 diesel and HSE Luxury – and two powertrains are available. Both are 3.0-litre V6s, one a turbocharged diesel producing 254 horsepower and 443 lb-ft of torque, the other a supercharged gasoline engine making 340 horsepower and 332 lb-ft of torque, mated to a ZF eight-speed automatic transmission.
 
 

Join DARPAN Magazine community on socialmedia!  

 

 FACEBOOK  |  TWITTER   | INSTAGRAM  |  YOUTUBE    |  ISSUU

MORE Auto ARTICLES

Range Rover LR4 HSE LUXURY

TOP OF THE LIST LUXURY OFF ROAD SUV My connection with all-wheel-drive (AWD) vehicles go back...

2015 Mercedes C400 4MATIC

Premiering at 2014 Canadian International Autoshow in Toronto, the C is completely redesigned and comes in two flavours for our shores: the four-cylinder C300, and the one I tested, the C400 bi-turbo with a V6. 

2015 MAZDA GS MX-5 MIATA

2015 MAZDA GS MX-5 MIATA

At about $30,000 dollars for a new MX-5, they are a lot cheaper than many convertibles on the market and as far as I am concerned, just about as much fun.

2015 Jaguar F-Type S Coupe

2015 Jaguar F-Type S Coupe

When Jaguar first revealed the F-TYPE Convertible, jaws collectively dropped around the world, wi...

Hyundai Tucson FCEV

Hyundai  Tucson FCEV

In late November, the Korean auto manufacturer announced they are going to be the first in Canada to offer a zero-emission hydrogen fuel cell vehicle to consumers, with the initial units arriving in the Lower Mainland in the coming months.

Top 5 Auto Picks For 2015

Top 5 Auto Picks For 2015

Seventy-three journalists wheeled in to Niagara Falls, ON for the 27th annual Automobile Journalists Association of Canada (AJAC) Canadian Car of the Year awards (CCOTY). Here are five of our favourite stand out models at the 2015 CCOTY program