Changes Afoot at Jaguar: XF Retouched, XE and XF Sportbrake Binned

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Jaguar has unveiled its short-term product plans, and fans of compact luxury sport sedans, as well as wagon enthusiasts, have reason to weep.

The fun-to-drive but cramped XE sports sedan is on its way out. The BMW 3-Series fighter wasn’t just good enough, it seems, to break into the public’s consciousness. Sales simply weren’t sufficient to keep it around.

The death of the XF Sportbrake is even more predictable. In the XE’s case, you’d think a stronger effort might have kept it afloat – and to be fair, it was nice to drive, if flawed in other key ways – but wagons are a tough sell in this crossover-crazed country these days. Especially wagons that are quite costly.

Just as an example – Jaguar sold only 99 Sportbrakes in the entire United States in 2018, according to GoodCarBadCar. That is…. not good.

The XF sedan, however, will be sticking around. And updated, to boot. Available in three trims (P250 S RWD, P250 SE RWD, and P300 R-Dynamic SE AWD), the car will be available with rear-wheel or all-wheel drive. If you’re not sure which trim will be available with which drivetrain, well, it’s right there in the names. Well, kinda – as you’ll see below, the lower trims with the base engine can be rear-wheel or all-wheel drive. Yes, it’s confusing.

The interior is redesigned, with a new 11.4-inch curved touchscreen for infotainment and a new shifter. The infotainment system, along with other onboard computer systems, now has over-the-air software updates. Active road-noise cancellation is now available, and the infotainment-menu structure is simplified.

Buyers can choose either a 246-horsepower, 2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder or a 296-pony, 2.0-liter turbo-four. The former engine is the choice for the two lower trims, while the top trim gets the latter. Both mate to an eight-speed automatic transmission. The lower-power engine is available with either rear-wheel or all-wheel drive and puts out 269 lb-ft of torque. A torque figure for the larger engine was not listed.

Other news includes the addition of more standard features (premium audio, satellite radio, remote keyless entry, and wireless cell-phone charging), available automatic vehicle hold (holds the brakes while the car is stationary until the driver presses the gas), and available rear-exit monitoring.

On the outside, the LED headlights slim down, taking a cue from the F-Type, and the lower air intakes are enlarged and reshaped. An option package adds Gloss Black grille, grille surround, lower air intake surrounds, side vents, window surround, tailgate finisher, rear valance finisher, and badging.

Gloss Black is applied to the lower front bumper, lower front air intakes, and upper rear valance on the top-trim car.

There are seven wheel designs to choose from, including 19- and 20-inch designs.

No news yet on pricing or on-sale date.

[Images: Jaguar Land Rover. European version shown.]

Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • Ytiradp Ytiradp on Oct 07, 2020

    That was the rumor that it maybe able to be modified for a car, which it already supports the Evoque and Discovery Sport. I wouldn't think it that difficult, but maybe keeping the lengthened version from the Disco Sport is a better choice.

  • Superdessucke Superdessucke on Oct 07, 2020

    Is it just me or is that steering wheel hub on the wrong way?

  • Zerofoo As much as I want "free" markets - they no longer exist.China has declared an economic war on the west. They will prop up their own industries with our money and undermine western industries as a strategy to soften up their economic rivals.We allow them to do this at our own peril.I don't like the idea of protecting inefficient industries, but I like losing those industries entirely to foreign nations even less.
  • Zerofoo A person that can be enticed to become a cop by a flashy car should probably not be a cop.
  • FreedMike I like this car's tech, but I just can't get past the styling here.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Tassos, I’m have several different responses yeti your question.[list=1][*] I didn’t buy the corvette for the sole purpose of highway travail, I got it because my dad had a 57 Corvette with 2 four barrel carbs and. 283 V8. I wanted a corvette and a friend who has a custom car performance shop said to get the newest one you could afford.[/*][*]. Letting a car sit is the worst thing for it so it was my daily driver when I was still in the army 30 miles to the base round trip, 160 miles to Tucson form my doctors appointments and VA stuff. My POS 2014 F150 was constantly in the shop for both turbos, two rear main seals, timing chain, transmission. So I was in the process of selling that.[/*][*]But the most important point is that everyone has an opinion and it doesn’t matter what car a person buys or what they use it for.[/*][/list=1]
  • EBFlex About time the corpse does something right.I wonder where he got the idea....
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