The Jaguar Car Models Monday, Mar 20 2006 


 

For reasons best known to sports/luxury car buyers, Jaguar sales aren’t where some might think they should be, considering the British automaker’s style and heritage.

Jaguars still have plenty of style, but it seems as if a sparkling heritage means little, if anything, to those snapping up Japanese Acura, Infiniti and Lexus sports/luxury sedans, which have virtually no heritage.

Those Japanese cars were decades away from being introduced when Jaguar was consistently winning the world-famous 24-hours Le Mans race in France in the 1950s, beating Ferraris and other exotic cars.

Jaguar sold only 30,424 cars in America last year, down from 45,875 in 2004 and 50 percent below the 2002 total. Meanwhile, Acura’s U.S. sales rose to 151,662 cars, Infiniti sales were up to 94,901 autos and Lexus sales gained to 151,226 cars. Things weren’t much better for Jaguar in Europe, its other main market.

JAGUAR S-TYPE

PRICES: $45,330-$63,330

LIKES: Sleek. Fast V-8 versions. Luxurious. Good handling.

DISLIKES: Awkward transmission shifter. Rather shallow trunk. Moderate resale value.

Ford has owned Jaguar since 1989, but has left the automaker pretty much alone so it can retain its singular design charm. BMW and Mercedes-Benz build cars in America, but Jaguar still makes autos only in Castle Bromwich, England. It hasn’t gone to Southern states, which have given generous tax breaks, special roads and such to land a new Japanese or German car plant so they can boost employment.

There’s nothing wrong with Jaguar, outside of the fact that rivals introduce new models more often. Critics say the fairly new, technically advanced top-line XJ sedan looks too much like its predecessor and that Jaguar is finally replacing its aged XK sports car with a new model this year. The S-Type isn’t the newest kid on the block, either, but won’t be replaced until spring 2008.

Ford scrapped Jaguar’s outdated equipment long ago and replaced it with state-of-the-art production facilities and leading-edge logistic practices to ensure high quality standards. Those who think Jaguars spell mechanical problems are living in the past.

Jaguar is remaking itself into a smaller, more exclusive luxury brand, although its new advertising campaign that emphasizes that the car is “gorgeous” seems odd; Jaguars always have been gorgeous, even when they were mechanical headaches.

Some think Jaguar lost prestige when it began offering its compact entry $32,330 X-Type sedan for 2002, although it built successful compact entry sedans in the 1960s. The all-wheel-drive X-Type was Jaguar’s top-seller last year, although it’s been outdone by the S-Type so far this year. Some think the X-Type isn’t a “genuine” Jaguar because it shares parts with Ford’s European Mondeo model. The X-Type reportedly will be phased out by 2010.

The S-Type sits in the middle of Jaguar’s sedan range in size and price — above the X-Type and below the XJ. Jaguar sold 8,897 S-Types last year, down from 10,975 in 2004.

The S-Type is offered as a base $45,330 3.0 model with a 235-horsepower V-6, mid-range $51,830 4.2 model with a 300-horsepower (up from 294) V-8 and top-line supercharged 400-horsepower (up from 390) V-8 R sedan, priced at $63,330.

All have a responsive six-speed automatic transmission. Even the 3.0 is well-equipped with comfort, convenience and safety equipment.

The 2006 S-Type models get richer looking new chrome mesh grille inserts, which have been put on the fastest European cars — including last year’s S-Type R. All new S-Types also have a new Conti-Teves brake system for shorter stopping distances and improved pedal feel.

The 3.0 adds standard 17-inch wheels and a power sunroof and is offered with a $1,700 Aluminum Sport Package with 18-inch wheels, sport suspension, sport seats and aluminum interior trim. The R has an enhanced sport suspension for better stability.

A $3,500 “VDP Edition” package for the 4.2 version has heated front power seats, premium leather seating material, front park control to avoid hitting unseen objects, burl walnut interior trim, walnut/leather steering wheel, electric rear sunblind and sumptuous footwell rugs.

A $2,800 navigation/Bluetooth package is offered for 3.0 and 4.2, and there’s a bunch of stand-alone options that include $450 Sirius satellite radio, $2,200 adaptive cruise control for the R model and $1,000 special order (nonstandard) color and trim combinations for all versions.

The S-Type 3.0 provides good performance, while the 4.2 is very fast and the R provides extraordinary acceleration. All versions provide a good balance of sport, luxury and civility.

My latest S-Type test car was the 4.2. Its quick steering is light in town and becomes firmer at highway speeds for better control. While fairly heavy, this car has quick moves, a poised demeanor and Jaguar’s typically supple ride, which shrugs off bumps. The brake pedal has a nice feel, and stopping distances are short.

The posh, quiet interior comfortably handles four 6-footers, although front occupants don’t have much surplus room and a sloping rear roofline means tall rear occupants must watch their heads when leaving the car. Visibility is generally good, but it’s impossible for a driver to see close-up objects directly behind the car.

Gauges can be quickly read and front/rear cupholders are conveniently located. However, the dashboard touch screen that contains some radio and climate controls can be distracting. Jaguar’s venerable J-gate-shaped shifter can cause imprecise gear selection if a driver shifts in a hurry.

Storage pockets in all doors, deep-covered console bin and fairly large glove box provide decent storage space for cell phones and such.

The usefully shaped trunk can be easily loaded with its wide opening, but it is rather shallow. Split-folding rear seatbacks flip forward to enlarge the cargo area and sit fairly flat. They have trunk-mounted releases to prevent thieves from gaining access to the trunk via the rear seat area.

The hood glides open on twin hydraulic struts to reveal an engine compartment with a V-8 set back for better weight distribution and easily reached fluid filler areas.

As always, there’s nothing quite like a Jaguar.

Jaguar XJ6 – Getting ready to fight Saturday, Feb 25 2006 

Rubbish Cars We Love: Jaguar XJ6 – Squaring Up For a Fight

Filed in in Features

In 1986 Jaguar introduced the XJ40, which was essentially an XJ6 with rectangular headlights and fewer curves. And essentially people were miffed about it too.

Slippery Slope:

The rot set in with Jaguar’s XJS in the early-eighties. The Mark 1 was a Formica junkyard drinking more petrol than a double-decker Humvee. Although a change of image was needed, Jaguar felt they had hit the jackpot with the XJ6 and kept tweaking through economy. ‘Make money by saving money’, that’s the big cat way.

While continuing to play with the XJS (a car they would finally get right about a week before discontinuing it), Jaguar hoped the XJ40 would bring in some much needed cash by appealing more to the masses than the offensively minted. This new XJ had been on the cards since the late seventies, and not much had changed on the drawing board over half a decade later.

Just when everyone else was starting to think round again, Jaguar went square. Co-designed by Pininfarina, the normally reliable Italian had a field day with the XJ40; “A corner here, a right angle there, and how about a pasta bake tin for the headlights, no?” Lord alone knows if he approved the dreadful cloth seats as well.

Public reaction to this thrifty Jag was grumbly at best. Though time has been generous to the XJ40. Find a good one and it might even be worth taking to your school reunion. Find a bad one and you’ll be towing it there.

Sit Down, Sir:

Alpine forestry interior was standard for all Jaguars in the 1970’s/80’s. Even as a cost costing exercise the XJ40 was no different. Cloth and plastic was the bargain basement option, along with a woefully pathetic 2.9 litre engine. If you purchased one of these you were a loser, no question. Why anyone would struggle to buy the bottom range model of anything is beyond us.

Thankfully Jag soon dropped the 2.9 and replaced it with a slightly more willing 3.2, promptly instructing dealers that anyone ordering cloth trim be reported to the Wild Wildlife Fund. Those poor cows had to make a living somehow.

You Will Or You Won’t:

Nothing was particularly wrong with the revamped XJ6. It was a cheap Jag when Jags were getting cheaper. It still bared all the hallmarks of the brand: smooth ride, long wheelbase, unpredictable circuitry. But for many it was not what was missing that caused concern…being flat enough to use as a dinner table is one thing, having the world’s most ill advised front-end is something else entirely.

That the public initially baulked at the XJ40’s headlights has only worked in its favour on the used market. Take a look around and all the most affordable retro-Jags are 40s. Plus those lights do not seem like quite such a balls-up idea nowadays. They fit the old thunderbus’ brutally angular lines perfectly. Symmetry they call it. The S Type, that’s what you call a real cock-up. If you want a Mark 2 , people; just buy a Mark 2.

Check or Cheque?:

Like us you have decided a cheap Jaguar is the car of your impoverished dreams. How can you ensure your car has not been used as student marijuana dealer’s weekend ride? Or worse still, has been sitting gathering woodworm in a dead man’s garage for the past decade?

The problem is that those in the know have been snapping up quality XJ40s for a while now. Most of the best examples change hands through club ownership (try the Jaguar Drivers site), with everything that’s left enticing the clinically gullible in high street car parks.

If you desperately want a square-jawed XJ6 you can buy one for less than £500. If you want your money to last longer than a fruit fly you will need to up this amount to at least £1000. Still not bad money for a luxury car that cost somewhere in the region of £30,000 new.