4x4 Magazine Australia

LEAP OF FAITH

TO SAY the new Defender is ‘all new’ is an understatement. It’s not just new in every single nut and bolt but it comes from a completely different place in time and technology. Where the old Defender, with its separate chassis and live axles was an evolution of 4x4 design practice from 80 years ago, the new Defender with its aerospace-inspired aluminium monocoque, fully independent and adaptable suspension, and complex and interwoven array of chassis and powertrain electronics is as advanced – if not more so – than any 4x4 on the planet.

What we have here is a Defender 110 P400 SE, where the 110 refers to the four-door wagon, the P400 to the 3.0-litre straight-six petrol engine, and SE to one of three equipment levels.

Next year, two different-tune straight-six diesel engines for the 110 are coming, as are short wheelbase two-door 90s with four- and six-cylinder petrol engines. Seemingly, after a short production run, the four-cylinder diesel 110s are no more.

POWERTRAIN AND PERFORMANCE

THE P400 is one of Land Rover’s new Ingenium three-, four- and six-cylinder ‘modular’ engines all based around common-design 500cc cylinders. The P400 is specifically a 3.0-litre petrol straight-six and comes with

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from 4x4 Magazine Australia

4x4 Magazine Australia2 min read
Ram 1500 Trx Final Edition On The Way
PRODUCTION of the current V8-powered RAM 1500TRX ended in the United States last year and the brand’s local importer recently announced 130 Final Edition vehicles for Australia. Due to hit Aussie showrooms soon, the 130 units are taken from a global
4x4 Magazine Australia6 min read
Northern Rush
IMAGINE the harsh reality for those gold prospectors who left their lives behind to head to CapeYork after the discovery of the precious metal there in the mid-1800s; walking for weeks into inhospitable country where there was no food and little wate
4x4 Magazine Australia7 min read
Wandering Withcelina
WHEN the day began with the sweet smell of baked bread wafting in our direction, it was time for us to get moving. We’d been camping overnight at Farina and could see the queue growing at the bakery’s door well before it opened. Over the years, Farin

Related Books & Audiobooks