Used 2018 Land RoverRange Rover Supercharged HSE 3.0

 
    Exterior Color
    Black
    Interior Color
    Black
    Odometer
    10,230 miles
    Body/Seating
    SUV/5 seats
    Fuel Economy
    17/23 MPG City/Hwy
    Transmission
    Automatic
    Drivetrain
    4x4
    Engine
    I6 F DOHC 24V / 4 WHEEL DRIVE
    VIN
    SALGS2SV7JA515496
    Stock Number
    11768G
    Land Rover Range Rover
    • Certified

    Highlighted Features

    • Navigation system
    • Speed limit sign recognition
    • Leather upholstery
    • Automatic temperature control
    • Emergency communication system
    • Power moonroof
    • Premium audio system
    • Wireless phone connectivity
    • Exterior parking camera rear
    • Front dual zone A/C
    • Rain sensing wipers
    • Headlight cleaning

    Included Packages & Accessories

    • Power Sunroof
    • Intermittent Wipers
    • Power Windows
    • CD player
    • Premium and/or Oversized Wheels
    • Power Adjustable Seat
    • Tilt Steering
    • Center Arm Rest
    • Power Steering
    • Power Seat
    • Alloy Wheels
    • Climate Control
    • Anti-Lock Brakes (ABS)
    • Premium Audio
    • Trip Odometer
    • Navigation System
    • Inside Hood Release
    • Xenon Headlights
    • Power Brakes
    • Power Door Locks
    • Cruise Control
    • Power Mirrors
    • Cup Holder
    • All Wheel Drive
    • Power-Assist Disc Brakes
    • Air Conditioning
    • Traction Control System
    • Engine: 3.0L V6 Supercharged
    • Radio: 380W Meridian Sound System w/Navigation Pro
    • Transmission: ZF 8-Speed Automatic
    • GVWR: 6,768 lbs

    Detailed Specifications

    • 1-touch down
    • 1-touch up
    • Air conditioning
    • Auto tilt-away steering wheel
    • Auto-dimming rearview mirror
    • Automatic temperature control
    • Driver door bin
    • Driver vanity mirror
    • Emergency communication system: InControl Protect
    • Front beverage holders
    • Front dual zone A/C
    • Garage door transmitter: HomeLink
    • Head restraints memory
    • Heated steering wheel
    • Illuminated entry
    • Memory seat
    • Navigation system: Touch Pro Navigation System
    • Overhead console
    • Passenger door bin
    • Passenger vanity mirror
    • Power moonroof
    • Power windows
    • Proximity keyless entry: doors and push button start
    • Rear air conditioning
    • Rear beverage holders
    • Rear door bins
    • Remote engine start: smart device
    • Remote keyless entry
    • Residual heat recirculation
    • Speed control
    • Steering wheel memory
    • Steering wheel mounted A/C controls
    • Telescoping steering wheel
    • Tilt steering wheel
    • Trunk/hatch auto-latch
    • Voice recorder
    • Adaptive suspension
    • Alloy wheels
    • Auto-leveling suspension
    • Four wheel independent suspension
    • Front anti-roll bar
    • Power steering
    • Rear anti-roll bar
    • Speed-sensing steering
    • 1st row LCD monitors: 3
    • AM/FM radio
    • Diversity antenna
    • Premium audio system: Meridian
    • Primary LCD size: 10.0"
    • Radio data system
    • Satellite radio trial duration with new vehicle purchase (months): 3
    • Smart device integration: InControl Apps
    • Speaker type: Meridian
    • Steering wheel mounted audio controls
    • Weather band radio
    • Wireless phone connectivity: Bluetooth
    • Driver seat mounted armrest
    • Front center armrest: w/storage
    • Front seats: bucket
    • Genuine wood console insert
    • Genuine wood dashboard insert
    • Genuine wood door panel insert
    • Heated front seats
    • Heated rear seats
    • Leather upholstery
    • Max seating capacity: 5
    • Passenger seat mounted armrest
    • Power 4-way driver lumbar support
    • Power 4-way passenger lumbar support
    • Power driver seat
    • Power passenger seat
    • Rear seat center armrest
    • Rear seats: split-bench
    • Rear seats Folding position: fold forward seatback
    • Split folding rear seat
    • Compressor: intercooled supercharger
    • Cylinder configuration: V-6
    • Engine liters: 3.0
    • Engine location: front
    • Fuel economy city: 17mpg
    • Fuel economy combined: 19mpg
    • Fuel economy highway: 23mpg
    • Fuel tank capacity: 27.3gal.
    • Horsepower: 380hp @ 6,500RPM
    • Manual-shift auto: CommandShift
    • Mode select transmission
    • Number of valves: 24
    • Recommended fuel: Premium Unleaded
    • Torque: 339 lb.-ft. @ 3,500RPM
    • Transmission: 8 speed automatic
    • Variable valve control
    • Approach angle: 24 deg
    • Departure angle: 24 deg
    • Ground clearance (max): 295mm (11.6")
    • Ground clearance (min): 220mm (8.7")
    • Ramp breakover angle: 20 deg
    • Auto-dimming door mirrors
    • Bumpers: body-color
    • Door auto-latch
    • Door mirrors: body-color
    • Heated door mirrors
    • Power door mirrors
    • Rear cargo: power liftgate/tailgate
    • Skid plates
    • Trailer sway control
    • Turn signal indicator mirrors
    • Compression ratio: 10.50 to 1
    • Curb weight: 2,256kg (4,974lbs)
    • Engine bore x stroke: 84.5mm x 89.0mm (3.33" x 3.50")
    • Engine displacement: 3.0 L
    • Engine horsepower: 380hp @ 6,500RPM
    • Engine torque: 339 lb.-ft. @ 3,500RPM
    • Exterior body width: 1,984mm (78.1")
    • Exterior height: 1,862mm (73.3")
    • Exterior length: 4,999mm (196.8")
    • Front headroom: 998mm (39.3")
    • Front legroom: 1,080mm (42.5")
    • Front shoulder room: 1,542mm (60.7")
    • GVWR: 3,070kg (6,768lbs)
    • Interior cargo volume: 900 L (32 cu.ft.)
    • Interior maximum cargo volume: 1,943 L (69 cu.ft.)
    • Rear headroom: 996mm (39.2")
    • Rear legroom: 1,021mm (40.2")
    • Rear shoulder room: 1,509mm (59.4")
    • Towing capacity: 3,500kg (7,716lbs)
    • Turning radius: 6.2m (20.2')
    • Wheelbase: 2,921mm (115.0")
    • Compass
    • Configurable
    • Delay-off headlights
    • Display: digital/analog
    • Exterior parking camera rear
    • Forward collision: Autonomous Emergency Braking mitigation
    • Front reading lights
    • Fully automatic headlights
    • Headlight cleaning
    • Low tire pressure warning
    • Outside temperature display
    • Rain sensing wipers
    • Rear collision: Reverse Traffic Detection warning
    • Rear fog lights
    • Rear reading lights
    • Rear window defroster
    • Rear window wiper
    • Speed limit sign recognition
    • Speed sensitive wipers
    • Tachometer
    • Trip computer
    • Variably intermittent wipers
    • 4 wheel disc brakes
    • ABS brakes
    • Anti-whiplash front head restraints
    • Brake assist
    • Dual front impact airbags
    • Dual front side impact airbags
    • Electronic stability
    • Ignition disable
    • Occupant sensing airbag
    • Overhead airbag
    • Panic alarm
    • Perimeter/approach lights
    • Power adjustable front head restraints
    • Security system
    • Tracker system: InControl Secure
    • Traction control

    Dealer Notes

    RAMSEY CORP IS HOME OF GUARANTEED CREDIT APPROVAL! THIS VEHICLE COMES WITH 38 MONTHS OR 42,749 MILES FACTORY DRIVE TRAIN WARRANTY; EXTENDED WARRANTIES AVAILABLE. FAMILY OWNED, NO COMMISSION SALES, NATIONWIDE SHIPPING RATES

    Leather / Heated Seating 
    Rear Parking Camera 
    Xenon Headlamps 
    Navigation 
    Sunroof 
    2018 LAND ROVER RANGE ROVER HSE
    SALGS2SV7JA515496
    4 DOOR SPORT UTILITY
    3.0L I6 F DOHC 24V
    4 WHEEL DRIVE 
    2018 Land Rover Range Rover

    The verdict:
    Comfortable, smooth and powerful, the Range Rover HSE Td6 combines diesel efficiency and torque with an opulent (but seriously flawed) interior.

    Versus the competition:
    For less money, the latest Lincoln Navigator provides better-executed controls, far more cargo and passenger space, a superior driving experience and a multimedia system that is easier to use — but not the cachet that comes with the Range Rover badge.

    Land Rover has done quite well for itself since its separation from Ford more than a decade ago. Under the watchful eye (and deep development pockets) of India’s Tata Group, the UK’s luxury SUV brand has thrived with new models, updated interiors and no loss of cachet along the way. The Range Rover model is still a desirable vehicle and status symbol for many thanks to its iconic styling and real go-anywhere capability. We just had a week with one of the more interesting variants of the luxury SUV: the 2018 Land Rover Range Rover HSE Td6.

    What’s all that word soup mean? Well, the overall brand is Land Rover, but under that there’s a model line range called Range Rover. Within that, you have the Range Rover Evoque (the little one), the Range Rover Velar (the slightly larger, more stylish one), the Range Rover Sport (the fastest one) and the plain old Range Rover, the biggest, most luxurious and most expensive one. That’s the one we tested here, but in an unusual twist, we tested what amounts to a mid-level trim, slotted above the base Range Rover and below the nicer (and more expensive) Supercharged, Autobiography and SV Autobiography Dynamic trim levels. This means that our test vehicle was nice, but not super nice like other examples I’ve tested in the past. The Range Rover is also available in two wheelbase lengths, in case you’re looking for an off-road limo; mine was the short-wheelbase variant. 

    It didn’t have a fancy, ultra-powerful engine, nor did it have much in the way of bells and whistles other than what you’d normally expect to find in a well-equipped luxury vehicle. But what it did have was all the elements necessary to create a driving experience that still makes you feel spoiled and coddled. And for the money, it had better at least do that.

    Diesel Is Not Dead

    The standard engine in the Range Rover model is a supercharged 3.0-liter V-6 making 340 horsepower, but my model came with the optional turbo-diesel 3.0-liter V-6 engine. In true diesel engine fashion, it pumps out only 254 hp but makes a mountainous 443 pounds-feet of torque. It should be noted that this engine also forms the basis for the new Ford Power Stroke diesel V-6 that can be found under the hood of the latest F-150 pickup truck, albeit with some serious modifications. The motor fires right up, but little effort seems to have been made to disguise the fact that there’s an oil-burner under the hood — it sounds for all the world like a Ford Super Duty pickup.

    One aspect of the Range Rover that can’t be hidden is its tall, narrow nature. Unlike competitors such as the Navigator or Escalade, which are wider and based on pickup underpinnings, the Range Rover is a dedicated SUV unibody. The tall seating position means that handling is a bit numb and body motions feel tippy around corners, but you’re not likely to drive this thing like a sports car anyway. It has plenty of confidence and stability as long as you don’t ask more of it than calm SUV duties demand. 

    While the Range Rover has one of the most advanced electronic off-road systems in the world, like most owners of these super-expensive all-terrain SUVs, I never did take it on anything more challenging than a gravel driveway. But you easily can — a rotary knob on the center console allows you to adjust the four-wheel-drive system according to the terrain you’re traveling over. While that’s more likely than not to be pavement, you have options for sand, snow, ruts, rocks and just about anything you might encounter. I’ve previously driven Land Rovers of all sorts over terrain you would have trouble traversing on foot, and I can attest to the efficacy of their electronic systems in allowing expensive, heavy trucks to make quick work of challenging environments. 

    The Buttons Are Gone

    Where I start to struggle with the Range Rover is inside. Land Rover has seen fit to do away with almost all of the vehicle’s buttons and knobs in favor of two large touch-sensitive screens on the center console and dashboard working in combination with touch-sensitive panel switches on the steering wheel and doors. In short, they’re terrible to use. While large, bright and easy to read, the screens themselves offer no feedback to the touch to let you know you’ve selected something successfully. I couldn’t even find a way to make the selection beep when I touched it. And just about everything is now selected through these screens, from multimedia and navigation to climate control. The seat heating and cooling functions, for instance, are hidden in their operation by pushing the same ring that controls climate control temperature, something I discovered by accident. Adjusting anything on these screens is a significant driver distraction, requiring you to take your eyes off the road and hunt for the selection you want. Furthermore, the sensitivity of the screen is poor, often requiring multiple touches.

    The same issue happens with the steering wheel controls, which are now touch-sensitive organic light-emitting diodes that change icons depending on what you’re asking them to do. The issue here is that they also don’t work well, requiring multiple presses in order to activate functions in the gauge display. The side mirror adjustment control on the top of the driver’s door is especially awful, with disappearing OLED icons on a completely horizontal panel that are impossible to read in the daytime.

    Such flat-panel control-display combinations may look flashy and do provide a high degree of customization and reconfiguration, but they do nothing to convey luxuriousness. Without feedback or an actuation of a physical button, the “quality feel” of the switches is absent. Cadillac and Lincoln have both learned from their mistaken foray into buttonless panels and have recently retreated from such panel-intensive interiors, but apparently this lesson needs to be learned by the next bunch of automakers like Land Rover and Volkswagen.

    Luxurious Trimmings but Compromised Cargo

    The controls largely ruin what is otherwise a lovely interior that uses premium materials throughout, with high-grade leather, real wood and metal trim, and highly adjustable seats that provide excellent comfort. The Mercedes-Benz GLS450 isn’t quite as nice, and the Cadillac Escalade doesn’t come close to being as opulent as the Range Rover’s cabin even in its top trim levels. Only the Lincoln Navigator Black Label rivals the Range Rover in terms of interior material quality and finish. There’s tons of headroom for all passengers thanks to the tall roof, and both front and backseat passengers have space to stretch their legs. This is just a five-seat SUV, however, while Cadillac, Lincoln and Mercedes-Benz all feature standard three-row accommodations.

    Cargo room is decent in the Range Rover, but the arrangement of the folding second-row seats is awkward. There’s 31.8 cubic feet of cargo room behind the second row, which is on the small side given that the Escalade, Navigator and GLS all have roughly 50 cubic feet or more. The Range Rover’s rear seats fold with power actuation, but the enormous head restraints don’t fold well, which forces the front seats to slide forward to fold the second row flat. This takes away legroom from the front occupants when the second row is stowed. Total cargo volume is 68.6 cubic feet, which is also well short of the larger, less expensive domestic brand competitors or the comparably priced but aging Mercedes-Benz GLS.

    Fully Modern Safety

    One area the Range Rover excels in is safety equipment. Forward emergency brake assist and autonomous braking is standard, as is cornering brake control and roll stability control. A 360-degree camera system is optional and was present on my test vehicle as part of a $2,400 Vision Assist Package that included automatic high-beam assist and a head-up display. The Range Rover has not been crash-tested by either the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety or the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. 

    Priced to Sell (in Limited Quantity)

    There are several grades of Range Rover to choose from, with an astonishingly wide price span: The 2018 starts at $88,345 including destination for the base Supercharged V-6 4×4 trim level, and it ranges up to well more than $200,000 for the loaded SV Supercharged V-8 Autobiography long-wheelbase trim. My mid-range HSE Td6 started at $97,045 including destination, but then added about $10,000 worth of options including the Vision Assist Package (auto high beams, customizable interior lighting, head-up display, surround-view cameras), the Drive Pro Pack (adaptive cruise control, lane keep assist, blind spot assist), a towing package, walnut veneer trim, 20-way heated and cooled front seats with power reclining rear seats, ebony headliner, four-zone climate control, 110-volt power outlets and cabin filtration. The grand total for my test vehicle was $108,040. 

    For this kind of money, you can find yourself in either a Lincoln Navigator L Black Label or a Cadillac Escalade ESV Platinum model, completely loaded to the gills with technology and luxurious appointments. In the case of the Lincoln, a competitive case can be made — it’s blessed with interior appointments that now rival some of the best luxury brands in the business. When considering the Escalade, however, the interior appointments do not match the exorbitant price, and the Range Rover does come out on top. Compare the Range Rover to its competitors here. The Range Rover also bests either of the two larger SUVs in the rare instance that you do need to head off-road, with its more sophisticated all-wheel-drive system, adjustable height suspension and better approach and departure angles. Add the Range Rover’s longtime luxury cachet, which counts for a lot in luxury buyers’ minds, and this latest model looks set to continue the brand’s popularity.


    KBB.com Consumer Reviews

    Kelley Blue Book - KBB.com
    Overall3.8Out of 5
    • The best

      By Chris on Monday, December 30, 2019

      5.0
      I got this truck used with 8000 miles on it in Cherry condition. It’s by far the greatest vehicle I have ever owned. The cavernous back seat always surprises guest passengers, and the kids love it for long hauls. Drives with power while remaining extremely refined. It does GUZZLE gas though, so not for the budget conscious. Electronics are pretty old school but everything works (I believe there’s a free upgrade path to Apple CarPlay, which would solve the entire issue). This is the “gentleman’s tank” — great if you can pick up a low miles version and find a 130k truck for 60-70k.
    • Best vehicle we have ever owned

      By SKJK on Saturday, December 11, 2021

      5.0
      Our 2017 RR Supercharged has never been in the shop for anything. We have put 70,000 enjoyable and trouble-free miles on it. The engine is powerful, the brakes are great, the comfort is amazing, the ride is like you are floating. This is a drivers vehicle!! Super smooth and comfortable!!
    • Behind the times

      By Richieisback on Monday, October 17, 2022

      4.0
      Technology package is inferior and slow to respond. Vehicle is not good value compared to others in same price range.