Rover’s last chance saloon is rapidly gaining a following among enthusiasts. And with many a good reason…
The Jaguar X-Type was, inmany ways, a pastiche ofa Jaguar. A fine car and a competitive entrant into the compact executive market, which was booming in the early 2000s. But a car that was also built out of necessity rather than passion.
It was a response to a market need, to help Jaguar expand its range and help it compete with cars like the BMW 3-Series, which was storming the sales charts.
It’s somewhat ironic, then, that the X-Type’s closest British rival was developed using BMW’s financial and engineering input. That car was the Rover 75, and although it has its flaws, it was arguably the best car that the company ever made. It also oozes character from every pore.
Rover diehards will probably argue against this point (and if we were talking about the 75-derived MG ZT it may be a different story), but of the two cars, it’s the Jaguar that’s the better one to drive. It has a more communicative chassis, more eager power delivery and sharper steering, while it retains Jaguar’s legendary ride quality.
I’ve owned an X-Type and a 75, both in 2.5-litre V6 flavour. For a while, I owned them concurrently, so my judgement that the X-Type is the better driver’s car is more than simple hypothesis, plucked from the content of contemporary road tests. But there’s a reason the X-Type has moved on to pastures new and the 75 remains. And, indeed, why it will remain indefinitely.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 31, 2018-Ausgabe von Classic Car Buyer.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 31, 2018-Ausgabe von Classic Car Buyer.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
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Staff Classics
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Rootes Group - The Golden Years
The Rootes Group’s finest years commenced immediately after the end of the Second World War with the launch of a handful of brand-new models and lasted until the company was absorbed into the Chrysler empire in the middle of the following decade
MG ZT
The MG ZT was more than a Rover 75 in sports shoes. Much, much more. It was a performance saloon par excellence and today makes for a superb classic sporting bargain
MG Display Controversy
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Extra Ordinary
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Alternative Go
As the internal combustion engine’s fate seems in question, we look back at its past challengers
Death Of The Sports Car?
Another manufacturer belies its heritage to switch to SUVs
Cool Coupes
Every manufacturer was in on the ’90s coupe trend, stylish two-doors in abundance. But nearly three decades on, which are worth investing in?
Classic Scenes
Writing this as news reports bring us images of Sheffield residents trapped overnight in shopping centers by floods, we were struck by this image from October 1987.
500 Not Out
We identify some modern classics in danger of extinction... and the older cars which massively outnumber them