The Range Rover Sport has a whole new face for 2010. The 2010 model features a new hood, new fenders with larger fender flares, the fenders incorporating two-bar LED turn indicators, new side vents, relocated lower air intakes, and new LED lamps front and rear. A two-bar grille replaces the previous three-bar grille and uses a more open mesh design.
The result of all the changes is a cleaner, more integrated, more aerodynamically efficient package.
For 2010, Range Rover Sport has been completely transformed inside. Every panel, every gauge and every switch has been redesigned to be more beautiful and more user-friendly. The major elements, including the dashboard, instrument panel, door panels and seats, all have been redesigned and upgraded. There are fewer switches overall, since many of the switching functions have been transferred to the touch screen at the top center of the instrument panel.
Range Rover Sport boasts an enormous list of standard equipment including pushbutton starting, a power tilt-and-telescope steering column, power tailgate, a full-color driver information center between the main gauges, satellite navigation with voice recognition, and all of the usual power assists.
We found the new Range Rover Sport interior to be beautifully made and tightly finished, sumptuous, comfortable, and quiet. The steering wheel is big and thick, mounting a complete set of controls for audio, telephone and cruise control, and the new power seats are beautifully made, supportive and comfortable for the long haul. The center stack has been completely redesigned to be easier to read and use. This interior is simply light years ahead of the old truck's and more than competitive with the other luxury SUVs in this segment.
The optional surround camera system uses five cameras, two facing forward, one on either side of the truck facing down, and one at the rear to give a near-360-degree view of surroundings. Camera views can be selected from the main nav screen, and the view can be zoomed if necessary. This feature was developed to assist drivers in trailer hookups and trailer maneuvering, as well as for checking all-around clearances and terrain when driving off-road. It shows live high-resolution video as you go, which can be enormously entertaining when traversing streams, because if the water is clear, you can see the rocks under the water and steer around them. (Trout fisherman may want to use it to look for fish!) No other car or SUV in the world offers this feature.
We drove a Range Rover Sport HSE with the climate package, luxury package, surround camera system, and locking rear differential.
The HSE comes with the baseline 375-hp V8 engine and six-speed ZF automatic transmission, a combination that will hurl the 5500-pound truck from 0 to 60 mph in only 7.2 seconds, virtually the same performance as the old 4.2-liter supercharged engine, without the extra cost.
It's the first home-built engine for a Range Rover, shared with its Jaguar cousins, and it has been modified from the Jaguar design for off-road use. That means a deeper oil pan to keep lubrication continuous even at high body angles when off road. All of the electric motors, pulleys and bearings under the hood, plus the starter, alternator and air conditioning compressor, have been completely waterproofed, which is a good thing because the Sport is rated to travel through 27 inches of water.
The improved ZF six-speed automatic transmission shifts very quickly and quietly, up or down. If you opt for the Supercharged model, you get a Sport mode added to the transmission and paddle shifters added to the steering wheel. These last two features were not on our HSE, but we didn't miss them.
Land Rover developed the basic suspension and the adaptive damping shock absorbers for the Range Rover Sport on the famous Nordschleife, the northern loop of the Nurburgring circuit in Germany, and it shows through to the average driver on a twisty country road.
The 2010 model's Terrain Response system menu has a new Dynamic Response program added to the menu, specifically to tune the suspension for high-performance road use. In this mode, the body is lowered and the shocks stiffened. There is very little body roll for a hefty truck that rides this high off the ground and has a high center of gravity, and the air suspension system combines with the P255/50R19 all-season tires to yield a quiet, smooth ride even in horrible off-road conditions. Hill Descent Control is standard, and there are additional settings in the system for rock crawling and sand driving. Modifications to the front suspension have made the steering response crisper as well.
Brakes on the HSE have been upgraded to the outgoing Supercharged model's 14.2-inch ventilated front discs and four-piston calipers, with 13.8-inch ventilated rear discs and twin-piston calipers, and they perform extremely well, even when soaking wet from underwater maneuvers: powerful, progressive and smooth. The brakes are used by the dynamic stability control system and the Roll Stability Control system to keep the truck on its intended path whenever cornering speeds are too high for conditions (when it detects a skid, for example).
In highway cruise mode, the truck settles down, the engine purrs in the background until provoked, the suspension lowers the truck closer to the road surface, and this fierce off-roader turns into a quiet limousine that tracks on down the road with a minimum of fuss and driver input.
The Range Rover Sport is rated to pull a 7700-pound trailer, and it has a trailer stability control built into the chassis system.
The 2010 Land Rover Range Rover Sport comes in two models: Range Rover Sport HSE ($59,645) and Range Rover Sport Supercharged ($74,195).
Standard equipment includes leather-trimmed upholstery, eight-way power front seats, dual-zone automatic climate control with pollen filter, GPS navigation system with touch screen, 480-watt Harman Kardon Logic7 digital surround sound AM/FM/6CD/MP3 audio system with 14 speakers, auxiliary jack, and iPod compatibility, front and rear Park Distance Control, power windows with backlit controls, retained accessory power for power windows and sunroof, HomeLink system, footwell lights and puddle lights, power rear liftgate with hatch-style window, folding rear seat split 65:35, cruise control, multi-function steering wheel, power mirrors, power locks.
Safety features include front, side-impact and curtain air bags, ABS, Electronic Brake Assist for extra boost in an emergency stop, Active Roll Mitigation, Roll Stability Control, Dynamic Stability Control to help maintain directional control, Hill Descent Control for steep inclines, Gradient Release Control Terrain Response, Four-wheel Electronic Traction Control, Electronic Brake-force Distribution, pre-tensioning front safety belts, automatic protection sequence (in a crash, shuts of engine and fuel, unlocks doors, activates hazard and interior lights), LATCH child seat attachment.