What is it?
Not even that long ago, merely the idea of the Velar P400e would have had Land Rover lovers scratching their heads. Possibly through to the bone.
This thing certainly feels a long way from the Series 1, or indeed anything the company offered before 2011, when the Evoque was introduced and quickly redefined what the brand could represent in the modern era.
And yet, these days giving buyers the option of a plug-in hybrid powertrain is commonplace. To be expected, even. And having a lower-riding, luxury-centric and altogether more car-like model in which to house it, pretty ideal for Land Rover.
Ideal because were you devise a full-size Land Rover, from scratch, to appeal to prevailing tastes in 2021, it would probably look an awful lot like the Range Rover Velar P400e.
This new plug-in hybrid derivative has been introduced alongside a broader refresh for the Velar, despite the fact the model is only three years old. Updates are therefore light, with the exterior gaining only new paint colours and wheel designs, which will do little to change the divisiness of the Velar. It'll remain concept-car slick to many, and a bit of smoothed-off clown's shoe on wheels to others.
The interior sees more change, and while it continues to major on woven fabrics as well as leather (if you'd like), you'll now find a new steering wheel and gear-selector, along with the updated touchscreens. The screens themselves are unchanged in terms of hardware, but they now use JLR's genuinely excellent new Pivi Pro infotainment software.
The engine line-up has then been streamlined. The headline acts are two turbocharged 3.0-litre straight-six, 48-volt mild hybrids and the four-cylinder turbo petrol plug-in hybrid tested here.
The flagship is the 396bhp P400 straight-six petrol, which'll hit 62mph in 5.5sec. However, with 479lb ft its D300 diesel counterpart is the most torque-rich model, and being rated at 38.2mpg combined, also considerably more frugal.
Lower down the range, the four-cylinder D200 turbodiesel replaces the old D180 and D240 units, and its P250 petrol equivalent is on hand for those willing to trade some fuel economy for a bit more power, but whose pockets are not quite deep enough for the plug-in or either of the six-cylinder models.
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