Autocar UK – 31 July 2019

(lu) #1

10 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 3 1 JULY 2019


Δ companies’ requirements


for next-generation EDUs to


support this transition have


significant overlap, making


for a mutually beneficial


collaboration.”


The enforced move towards


electrification is proving


extremely expensive for


even the most profitable of


car makers. Even Mercedes-


Benz is seeing premium profit


margins vanish because of


the cost of new platforms and


electrification.


Autocar’s source claimed


that the latest move beyond


EDUs and into sharing engines


is intended to allow JLR to


reduce its investment in its


own Ingenium engine range.


That would then allow the


company to re-allocate


resources to the huge


costs involved in what JLR


calls ‘ACES’ (autonomous,


connected, electric, shared)


technology for future vehicles.


In truth, most models bigger


than a city car will probably


have to be plug-in hybrids to


meet the 2025 and 2030 EU


emissions regulations – and


that’s why the prospect of JLR


sharing the new BMW FAAR


platform is now on the agenda.


THE FAAR PLATFORM


BMW’s FAAR architecture,


s e e n m o st r e ce ntl y o n th e


new BMW 1 Series, has been


designed to accommodate
petrol, hybrid and full-electric

powertrains.


The FAAR transverse-


engined architecture will in


time underpin all front-wheel-


drive BMW models and Mini’s


e nti r e ra n g e. U s i n g i t wo u l d


dig JLR out of a significant


fu tu r e h o l e c a u s e d by th e l a c k


of a modern, compact, hybrid


platform for 2025 and beyond.


Adding JLR’s current


small and medium volumes of


250,000 to BMW’s 850,


or so production of front-drive
vehicles will be seen as a handy

boost. It would also integrate


FAAR family production at


BMW’s Oxford plant and JLR’s


Halewood facility, which


would be backed up by engine


and battery production at


Hams Hall and electric motor


production in Wolverhampton.


With the addition of two


small Jaguars and a baby Land


Rove r, FA A R p l a t fo r m vo l u m e s


could approach 1.5 million


annually by 2025.


The FAAR architecture looks


like a good fit for JLR because
i t i s ex p e c te d to s p a n c a r s s ize d

between 4.2m and 4.6m in


length. Smaller FAAR-based


cars are unlikely because the


need to package batteries in


the new models means there’s


a minimum length for the


architecture.


For example, today’s


Discovery Sport (4.6m) is


almost the same length as the


current BMW 2 Series Grand


Tourer. A Mini Countryman is


4.3m long and a Range Rover


Evoque 4. 37m.


The recently launched


second-generation Evoque and


updated Discovery Sport are


both built on JLR’s Premium


Transverse Architecture,


which, even though it has been
developed to accommodate

electrified powertrains, is


still an updated version of an


older platform. Using BMW’s


more modern FAAR platform


would potentially offer great


economies of scale, reducing
production costs.

THE NEW MODELS


Although details are very thin


on the ground, the new baby


L a n d Rove r i s l i ke l y to b e a n


urban-focused – although


still highly capable – compact


off-roader inspired by the


looks of the new Defender.


This potentially Freelander-


badged car would be able


to trace its roots back to


the DC100 concept of 2011,


which found favour for its fun,


compact design but not as a


replacement for the Defender,


as it was originally intended.


The two Jaguars are also


likely to be crossovers, one


more coupé-like than the other
a n d b o th s o l d a s p a r t of th e

Pace SUV family. Inspiration for


the lower-roofed new Jaguar


might come from the 2003


R-D6 hatchback concept, the


first Jaguar design of recently


retired design boss Ian Callum.


The names A-Pace, B-Pace,


New £24k baby Land


Rover will draw on
2019 Defender’s look

Baby Jaguars could


use same platform


as BMW 1 Series

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