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Jaguar X-Type 

Jaguar X-TYPE
Jaguar X-Type sedan
Manufacturer Jaguar Cars
Parent company Ford Motor Company (2001-2008)
Tata Motors (2008-)
Production 2002–present
Assembly Halewood, England, UK
Class Compact executive car
Body style(s) 4-door saloon
5-door estate
Layout Front engine, front-wheel drive / four-wheel drive
Platform Ford CD132 platform
Engine(s) 2.1 L AJ V6
2.5 L AJ V6
3.0 L AJ V6
2.0 L Diesel I4
2.2 L Diesel I4
Transmission(s) 5-speed automatic
Wheelbase 106.7 in (2710 mm)
Length Sedan: 4672 mm (183.9 in)
2002-08 Wagon: 185.5 in (4712 mm)
2009- Wagon: 4716 mm (185.7 in)
Width Bodywork: 70.4 in (1788 mm)
2002-08 Overall: 78.8 in (2002 mm)
2009- Overall: 2000 mm (78.7 in)
Height 2009- Sedan: 54.8 in (1392 mm)
Wagon: 58.4 in (1483 mm)
2009- Sedan: 1430 mm (56.3 in)
Fuel capacity 16 US gal (61 L/13 imp gal)
Related Ford Mondeo

The X-Type is a compact executive car produced by the British luxury automaker Jaguar since 2001. It is the smallest of the current range of Jaguar saloons and alongside the 1998 S-Type, was intended to spearhead the company’s efforts in emulating the sales of German rivals Audi, BMW, and Mercedes-Benz. It is produced at Jaguar Land Rover’s Halewood facility in Liverpool, alongside the Land Rover Freelander.

Contents

Model History (2001 – present)

Overview

Codenamed X400, the X-Type was Jaguar’s attempt to compete in the compact executive car segment. Jaguar and parent company Ford envisaged the ‘baby Jag’ as Jaguar's first compact 4-door. The X-Type was one of the last to be styled under the supervision of Geoff Lawson, with the principal designer credited as Wayne Burgess.[1]

2004 Jaguar X-Type Estate
2004 Jaguar X-Type Estate

Neither Jaguar or Ford had a suitable small rear-wheel drive platform to base the X-Type on, and the decision was made to base the X-Type on a modified version of the Ford CD132 platform, the basis for the 2000 Ford Mondeo. In order to distinguish it from its rivals and its Ford origins, the X-Type was initially offered as all wheel drive only and mated to a 2.5 litre and 3.0 litre V6 petrol engine. In 2003, the X-Type was offered in front wheel drive with the introduction of Jaguar’s first diesel engines, and with the smaller 2.0 litre petrol V6.

In 2004, a further body style was added with the introduction of a estate version, making it the second ever Jaguar estate car. In the United States, the estate was officially known as the "Sportwagon”.

In 2007, the X-Type was facelifted and sports a different front grille, front bumper, rear bootlid, and rear bumper, to give the car a more dynamic and contemporary look. The new grille echoes the grille on the 2008 XF, and the facelifted 2008 XJ.

Engines

Petrol Engines
Displacement Cyl Power Years
2.0 L V6 157 PS (155 hp/115 kW) (2003 – 2007)
2.5 L V6 197 PS (194 hp/145 kW) (2001 – 2007)
3.0 L V6 231 PS (228 hp/170 kW) (2001 – present)
Diesel Engines
Displacement Cyl Power Years
2.0 L I4 130 PS (128 hp/96 kW) (2003 – present)
2.2 L I4 155 PS (153 hp/114 kW) (2003 – present)

Sales & Future

Despite the X-Type competing in the growing compact executive sector, sales never met expectations of 100,000 annually, peaking at 50,000 in 2003. In the United States, the car's primary market, sales dropped from 21,542 in 2004 to 10,941 in 2005. In the same year, Audi sold 48,922 A4s, BMW sold 106,950 3 series and Mercedes-Benz sold 60,658 C-Classes. Despite this, the X-Type has been Jaguar's bestselling model since its introduction.

Due to poor sales and reduced profit margins, stemming partly from a weaker United States dollar; Jaguar ceased sales of the X-Type in North America in late 2007.

The current facelifted model is expected to continue through to the 2010 model year in its remaining markets, and will be replaced by an all-new model. It emerged in early 2008 that despite management denials at the time, the slow-selling X-Type “was essentially designed in Detroit and presented as close to a fait accompli to reluctant designers and engineers at Jaguar's Whitley design centre, near the Midlands city of Coventry”.[2]

References

  1. ^ Jaguar Expands the 2005 X-Type Range with three new models, MediaFord.com, 1 August 2004, [1], accessed 3 Aug 2008
  2. ^ Jaguar ‘entirely relaxed’ about Tata takeover, FT.com, 28 January 2008, [2], accessed 3 August 2008

External Links

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