Interior
What a change the interiors are from the previous generation! The cabin feels a lot newer and gets a massive touchscreen in the middle. The quality of materials is very premium and feel great to touch:
A 2-spoke steering wheel with touch control buttons is similar to what we’ve seen on Land Rovers in the recent past. It’s nice to hold and is large in diameter like the previous Range Rovers:
You get a heads-up display that gives a lot of information:
The steering wheel has multimedia controls on the left spoke and switches for the driver assistance features on the right:
Nice detailing on the stalks. They feel solid and nice to use:
13.7-inch high-definition display MID gets various permutations and combinations. There are also off-road and navigation details. The screen may not have as much flexibility in terms of content, but the graphics are top-notch:
A look at the driver's door. Good quality materials all around and everything feels very premium to the touch:
Similar power window buttons as the previous generation, except they’re no more in the signature Land Rover placement on top of the doorpad. They’ve been moved to the armrest area. You get memory functions for seats:
Meridian tweeter is placed on the inside of the door and gets a plastic grille. Looks downmarket. An aluminium trim would’ve looked much better:
Front seats are supremely comfortable and very well supportive. Top quality leather. They seem to be lacking some under-thigh support which is surprising since the previous gen had much better support:
Big ORVMs give a good view of the rear. They’re heated and have anti-glare:
IRVM is a conversation mirror that turns into a camera. JLR trickery, but very useful:
A look at the sunroof. It doesn’t have gesture control:
AC vents are well integrated into the dashboard and have a futuristic design. The hazard lights button gets camouflaged:
You get a 13.1-inch curved touchscreen with Land Rover's Pivi Pro infotainment system. It’s very user-friendly and has a crisp display with no lag. Interestingly, you can choose haptic feedback, where you have to touch and press the options on the screen. It is supposed to reduce the need to look away from the road and use the screen. The head unit is mated to a 35-speaker, 1,680W Meridian Signature Sound System with active noise cancellation. The ANC system monitors wheel vibrations, tyre noise and engine sound transmitted into the cabin and generates a cancelling signal:
A look at some of the options like auto park, stability control and ride height:
Interestingly the 360 camera can be activated at any speed and not just at parking speed:
The physical buttons for AC controls look very basic and not as premium. However, they feel good to use and…
… the knobs have multiple functions. Push the knob in for seat ventilation options and pull for blower speed control:
The cabin has plenty of storage areas that can be covered for a cleaner look. The one below the AC controls has a wireless charging pad and a USB-C charging port as well:
A look at the classy gear lever. Nice and stubby feels good to hold:
You also get a terrain response system in which you can choose from six driving modes. There’s a low-range mode as well:
A couple of well-sized cupholders are below:
You get an upper and a lower glovebox, both of which are quite accommodating:
This is where you would prefer to be. The rear seats are extremely comfortable:
Just like the front, the switches have also been shifted to the armrest area. You get a button to mute the infotainment system so you don't always have to ask the driver to do it. Then you have the sunblind control and two reading light options. You can select the laptop button to let the light focus on the lap or you can select the book reading light option which focuses the light on the area where you would usually hold something to read. You can also choose to lower both rear windows or the one on your side or the one on the other side window by pressing the button above the window switch:
A look at the headrests. They’re perforated because all the seats have speakers built in them for active noise cancellation:
The centre armrest is powered to go up and down:
The centre armrest gets a touchscreen with loads of options for the rear passengers. One good thing is that the recline position is a one-touch operation. In most cars you have to keep the button pressed to recline the seat:
You can press the cup option on the touchscreen and the top part of the armrest extends to reveal the cupholders underneath:
In recline position, you have superb comfort. Over good roads and bad too. You have everything you need. They come with massage and cooling functions too. Legroom is just too good:
Another view from the rear seat. It shows the amount of space here. You can also see the speakers below the screens and the footrest popping out of the front seat:
The screens get HDMI inputs and you can do a lot of things with them:
You get Land Rover badged Bluetooth headphones too:
AC controls may look downmarket and basic but are very nice and premium to feel and use:
The boot opens with a split style like all Range Rovers. The lower part is also powered and not manual as you see in most cars:
You can get some additional boot space by lowering the rear seats:
Nice to see a full-sized spare wheel tucked under the boot floor. Probably going to need one given the 22-inch wheels and low-profile tyres:
Buttons on the side of the boot to raise and lower the height for easier loading and unloading and to fold down the rear seats:
A panel on the floor can be set upright to create a backrest:
As you rest at the tailgate, the Tailgate Event Suite focuses the audio through these rear speakers for a nice experience:
