Autocar UK – 31 July 2019

(lu) #1

50 AUTOCAR.CO.UK 3 1 JULY 2019


Range Rover Velar


A three-and-a-half-star road test verdict wasn’t a promising fanfare for Land Rover’s


most overtly metropolitan model, subconsciously compounding reservations about a


style-centric Range Rover sprung from Jaguar underpinnings. But at least half a star had


been shed by the test car’s underwhelming 237bhp diesel engine – a failing remedied by


the 296bhp petrol four-pot powering the Velar I spent a fortnight with last summer. It was quick, it


handled and it was comfortable. Moreover, it did things off road I would never have anticipated –


certainly more than almost anyone would need. It’s currently the Land Rover that would fit my life


better than any other. RW


I GOT IT


WRONG


Porsche Cayenne


I was a Cayenne sceptic. I couldn’t work


out why Porsche had bothered, which


explains why I am not a product planner


or in marketing. I thought it was a bit


pointless and not very pretty. Then I bought an old


one. After the passing of quite a few years – 17, I


think – I have to say it really is quite handsome. A


high-rised 996-generation 911 is not a bad thing.


That V8 makes a wonderful noise, it is pin sharp on


the road and there is a ton of space in that great big


boot. A practical Porsche. Brilliant. JR


No one gets it right all the time, not even our crack


team, who confess their worst errors of judgement


BMW Z3 M


It’s not so much that I got it wrong at the


time, more a case of realising now that


although it was f lawed, it was almost the


l a s t of a br e e d. O r, t o put it mor e si mpl y, i f


it was made new today, we’d all love it. I’m talking


about BMW’s Z3 M Roadster. A simple car with


hardly any electronics, and a lovely straight-six


e n g i ne w it h mor e t h a n e nou g h p e r for m a nc e.


It looked way better than the standard car thanks


to blown-out wheel arches and wide rims. The


chassis wasn’t brilliant and the steering a bit soggy.


If you own one today, I’d suspect you love it. CG


Porsche 911


When I was new to this game, I


struggled with the appeal of a car that,


conceptually, was deeply f lawed. We
don’t think about the 911’s seriously

unhelpful weight distribution much now, because


Porsche long ago defeated the urge of its rear-hung


powerpack to initiate unwanted gyrations. Back


in the mid-1980s, said f lat six could quite easily tip


the 911 into a spin if you were rashly indelicate with


throttle, wheel and a bend. And if you braked hard


while travelling downhill on a wet road, a lock-up


might follow. It was an intimidating car. I didn’t


realise you had to master the 911, this the key to its


appeal. I do now. RBr

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