Once in the while, the automotive community gets a welcome kick receiving and subsequently circulating rumours about a new vehicle leaked from the drawing board. Is it the newest Ferrari? A Porsche? A Benz? Or a new FI engine? No, it’s a Defender – the new Land Rover Defender slated to appear in 2014.
That’s a good 4 years from now and yet we are getting a lot of speculations about it this early. The Tata-owned Jaguar Land Rover marque of SUVs is gearing up to launch a hybrid SUV positioned as a replacement and successor to the landmark Land Rover Defender for which the word iconic would have invented.
The 62-year old strike-anywhere-carry-anything 4X4 all-terrain sub-urban-but-city-driving vehicle might by now be undergoing all the engineering tweaks in time for its 2014 unveiling under the code-name Project Icon. What a fitting name.
Project Icon
The rumour seems too early to get around. There just doesn’t seem to be much information about the forthcoming Defender other than its project name and the speculations about its hybrid nature. But we can add up a few developments, both rumoured and factual that just might point to the inevitable new Land Rover Defender sooner or later.
* The Defender brand was slapped on the now legendary Land Rover in 1990 to kick start a naming convention and distinguish it from the company’s new Land Rover Discovery series. The Defender styling as it is today is already 25 years old but is actually a direct styling descendant of the first post war Land Rover of 1948. Admittedly, new production and assembly methods have made the Defender line profitable to build starting in the 90s, which postponed its replacement. But the time is right for a new Defender.
* In what seems like a corporate move similar to badgering Papa for extra dough, the Land Rover Company had gotten approval from Tata Motors for additional funding to design and engineer the next generation Defender line up
* The current Defender platform is just too heavy and won’t be able to face the stringent new EU efficiency and carbon emission standards. It also does not satisfy the safety requirements of Uncle Sam.
* Its powertrain is expected to be the biggest differentiating element with hybrid features. But we can only guess based on the past hybrid designs like the Electronic Rear Axle Drive used in the Freelander hybrid model. It had a 22-volt motor delivering 34-47hp and 147 ft-lb torque to drive the rear wheels and could drive the front as well when needed.
Awaiting the Announcement
In the meantime, while awaiting official announcement of the new Defender, the world will have to feast on the Defender 90 and 110 models pf 2010-2011 model year as well as its earlier 60th anniversary variant released in 2008. The 90 is the shorter 3-door model while the 110 is the full sizes 5-door SUV.
You can get any of the wannabee rivals like the Toyota Land Cruiser LC3 for 29,000, or the Nissan Pathfinder 2.5 Accenta for roughly 26,900 and the Mitsubishi Shogun 3.2 Equippe for 27,500. But when you’re talking about a legend like the Land Rover Defender 110, you have a pedigreed SUV none of them can touch. It’s even the cheapest option at 25,500. GP