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Saturday, May 30, 2009

2010 Jaguar XFR, XKR and one of the best V8s on the market


About 20 minutes after heading south towards the Mediterranean, traffic on our four-lane roadway stops abruptly. The bus we have just passed pulls up on our right and an officer is standing in the middle of the roadway, waving the morass of motorists through – until we reach the head of the pack. He points at us, then motions towards an unpaved turnout where a handful of squad cars are accompanied by a dozen police officers.

We pull the white, droptop XK into the dirt lot, twist the rotary shifter into Park and within seconds we're being berated by a young officer with "CADET" embroidered across his upright baseball cap. Our French is about as good as our Klingon, so after realizing we don't speak the native tongue, he snatches our documents and leaves us to stew.

A few minutes pass, at which point an older officer approaches and asks in perfect English, "Do you know why you are here?" We tepidly shake our heads as he informs us we were doing 60 km/h in a 40 zone. Our wallet recoils in horror as we remember the advice given to us earlier in the week: "The police in France are very strict about speed limits. The fine can run upwards of 1,500 euros (a little over $2,000) and it is payable on the spot." Just as thoughts of frantic phone calls, maxed-out credit cards and the atrocities that await us in a Parisian jail cell begin to flood our minds, the officer cocks his head sideways, realizes we're a pair of dimwitted Americans and simply says, "Please be more careful."

Jaguar's managing director, Mike O'Driscoll, admits it's been, "a traumatic ten years" for the brand. Aging, lackluster products and a poorly implemented marketing strategy conspired against the automaker and it quickly fell off the radar of both German brand refugees and Jag's most ardent devotees. But last year's introduction of the XF proved Jaguar was poised for a renaissance (Tata takeover or not) and O'Driscoll's posture straightens and his chin tilts upwards when he says, "We're making Jaguar Jaguar again." And 2009 is Jag's coming out party.

The all-new XJ is due to be revealed next month and go on sale this December, and for the 2010 model year, Jaguar has added two new high-performance models to the mix – the XFR and XKR – along with upgrading the powerplants in its shapely sedan and arresting (pun intended) coupe/convertible.


2010 Jaguar XF

Both the naturally aspirated and supercharged 4.2-liter V8s are gone in the U.S. market for 2010, and in their place is an all-new, Jaguar-developed 5.0-liter direct-injected eight-pot putting out 385 hp and 380 lb-ft of torque. Jag's codename for the revised mill is the "AJ-V8 Gen III," but don't let that fool you – only two parts have been carried over from the outgoing engine – and one of them is a screw.

Fitted to both the 2010 Jaguar XF and XJ, the 5.0-liter V8 is a torquetastic wonder of modern machinery that utterly transforms both the sedan and coupe. With peak twist coming in below 2,500 rpm, a judicious mash of the throttle elicits a wave of torque that's as flat as the Salar de Uyuni and best measured with an EKG.


Channeling both the XF and XK's newfound grunt to the rear wheels is a revised six-speed automatic gearbox with uprated internals to make better use of the mill's inflated torque. Gear selection is controlled by either the reworked, shift-by-wire computer or through the steering wheel-mounted paddles, each of which delivers some of the most crisp, immediate shifts this side of a dual-clutch 'box and one of the most intoxicating throttle blips known to man. Our only complaint centers on the traction control system which, even when engaged in Competition mode by pressing the checkered flag button on the transmission tunnel, cuts in far too soon for our tastes. Completely disabling the electro-nanny requires the driver to depress the same button for 12 seconds, something we're not inclined to condone when blasting across the narrow, unfamiliar byways draped over Southern France's majestic mountains.


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