Carworks.com. Review for 2007 Land Rover Range Rover Sport
 
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Land Rover Range Rover Sport
Land Rover Range Rover Sport
 
MSRP Price:
$57,235.00
 
Internet Discount Price:
   
 

  In Depth Reviews:    

Land Rover Range Rover Sport In Depth View  


Land Rover Range Rover Sport
Quick Facts

Vehicle Type: Sport Utility Vehicles
Engine Type: 4.2-liter dohc 32-valve supercharged V8
Transmission: 6-speed CommandShift automatic
Safety Equipment (standard): twin, dual-stage frontal airbags; front seat-mounted side airbags; full-coverage side curtain airbags; antilock brakes with Electronic Brake Force Distribution and brake assist; 4-wheel, all-terrain traction control; Dynamic Stability Control; child safety seat anchors (LATCH); front and rear park assist
Fuel Economy: 13/19
 

 
Land Rover Range Rover Sport Walkaround

At first glance, the Range Rover Sport could easily be mistaken for the top-of-the-line Range Rover. To the extent there are differences, they are confined to dimensions and subtle styling cues.

Although nominally based on the Land Rover LR3 (formerly known as the Discovery), the Sport is smaller on the outside in all but width, and that by less than half an inch. The Sport is more than two inches shorter than the LR3 in overall length; its wheelbase is shorter by more than five inches. It's not as tall, by three inches. In one significant measure, it's identical to the LR3, and that is its track, the distance between the wheels from side to side, which is also less than an inch narrower than the taller and longer top-of-the-line Range Rover.

Appearance-wise, the Sport so closely resembles the top-of-the-line Range Rover that it's like the Disneyland version of Main Street: It looks just like the real one built to a slightly smaller scale. Only the most discerning and trained eye will notice that the hood, or bonnet, as they call it on the other side of the pond, is mostly flat, missing the full-size Range Rover's castellations, those longitudinal humps running along the top outer edges back from the headlights. Or that the windscreen and backlight (rear windscreen) are faster, or more raked. Or the presence of understated side skirts, front air dam and rear spoiler. Maybe the front quarter panels' side vents are more obvious, being closely patterned after the LR3's and in stark contrast to the Range Rover's vertical louvers.

Because, other than striking a slightly more rakish pose with its rounder, more tapered lines, the Sport contains all the major styling elements of its full-size kin. The compound headlight clusters are indistinguishable. The grille finishes are alike, with the HSE's a matte gray and the S/C's a bright metallic. The roof gets the marque's trademark floating look, achieved by blacking out the roof pillars. A similar character line runs the length of the body side, but with the door handles positioned beneath it to reinforce the Sport's lower profile. Taillights repeat the larger Range Rover's stacked look, only not quite as tall and with the elements staggered from the vertical. And just like the full-size Range Rovers, the Supercharged Sport has chrome-tipped dual exhausts in place of the HSE's bare, single exhaust.


 
 
 
 
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