F-Type
Jaguar bosses are desperate to build this car. They can practically taste the market excitement it would cause, especially in the US and the UK. The popular proposal is for a steel-bodied, XF-based two-seater that uses V6 and V8 engines and starts at under £45,000 (although top-end models would be direct Porsche 911 rivals). It would be 200kg lighter than a similarly engined XF saloon, about 70cm shorter overall and 40cm shorter in the wheelbase. The suspension and running gear would be largely familiar, although engineers reckon there would be a case for modified front suspension with less unsprung weight. Look for a soft-top rather than a design-limiting folding steel roof. All at Jaguar know any sports car will have to live in the shadow of the E-type, and will be expected to look amazing.
XF Coupé
Jaguar could conceivably build four offshoots of the XF: a four-seat convertible, a coupé, a sporty estate and a crossover 4x4.However, a fixed-roof coupé is the most likely because the saloon’s proportions lend themselves to the switch, the engineering is straightforward, the idea suits the Jaguar marque values well, and recent German coupé successes show it could sell. Expect it to stick largely with the saloon’s interior architecture and engine line-up, but to be distinctive enough to sell on exclusivity.
XF Crossover 4x4
Controversial, this one, and only a long-odds possibility. Jaguar marketing men envy booming sales of rival brands in this sector and reckon the XF design values could easily stretch to a sleek, stylish soft-roader. Designers have already produced proposals and full-size models.However, the Jaguar/Land Rover decision makers believe Jaguar must resist becoming a 4x4 company, and leave such vehicles to Land Rover, especially as its associate marque is about to move further into the high-style 4x4 bracket with the new LRX.
XF Convertible
The proposal for a four-seat, open-top version of the XF is not favoured at present by either engineers or accountants. The engineers don’t want it because of the large amount of unique engineering needed to reinforce the chassis and to make such a large fabric roof. The bean counters are hesitant because of the expense, given the modest expected sales. American dealers are predictably keen, but the company calculates they can attract rag-top customers with the coupé.
XF Estate
Another non-starter. Jaguar’s designers have investigated a sporty wagon, but the idea has been shelved for good. Realists at the firm say it lacks estate heritage, and they take lessons from German estates, which work in Europe but sell poorly in America. Jaguar’s future volume will be a fraction of BMW’s or Audi’s; it couldn’t bear the development costs of a wagon knowing that at least 50 per cent of its potential market doesn’t want it.
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Re: Jaguar: tomorrow's models
The X type is due to be dropped from the line up, and not before time. it is believed to be going in either 2010 or 2009 to make way for the XF derivatives, as they think they will need the space at Halewood to build them.
The X type is a has been and cannot compete at todays levels. After all it is based on the old Mondeo chassis (which was pretty good), but a mile away from the new one.
Jaguars are boring. I'm sick of hearing about their fresh start and looking to the future, it never arrives at Jaguar.
Re: Jaguar: tomorrow's models
A shame not to see any hint of an X-Type replacement. The main criticism of the current car seems to be the dated styling - which I am happy to live with to enjoy the superb chassis and refined, powerful 2.2 diesel. The lack of these at launch was of course a major obstacle to European sales. In the current climate of high fuel prices and "green" taxation, the market for small/mid size "prestige" cars must be strong, and it seems madness not to exploit this and provide a real alternative to the unsettled ride of the 320d and most other class rivals.
Re: Jaguar: tomorrow's models
i'd be interested 2 c how it turned out 2 itz rivals