Car Review UK

  • Home
  • Road Tests
  • First Drive
  • Brands
    • Abarth
    • Alfa Romeo
    • Aston Martin
    • Audi
    • Bentley
    • BMW
    • Chevrolet
    • Chrysler
    • Citroen
    • Dacia
    • Daihatsu
    • Dodge
    • Ferrari
    • Fiat
    • Ford
    • Great Wall
    • Honda
    • Hyundai
    • Infiniti
    • Isuzu
    • Jaguar
    • Jeep
    • Kia
    • Land Rover
    • Lexus
    • Maserati
    • Mazda
    • McLaren
    • Mercedes-Benz
    • MG
    • Mini
    • Mitsubishi
    • Nissan
    • Peugeot
    • Porsche
    • Proton
    • Renault
    • Rolls-Royce
    • SAAB
    • SEAT
    • Skoda
    • Smart
    • Subaru
    • Suzuki
    • Toyota
    • Vauxhall
    • Volkswagen
    • Volvo
  • Music

Featured · Jaguar · Reviews · Road Tests

Sportbrake has the XF factor

  • by Mike Torpey
  • April 1, 2014

  • ROAD TEST – JAGUAR XF SPORTBRAKE

YOU could describe the XF Sportbrake model as the most versatile Jaguar ever created – it’s also one of the best looking.

Stylish, elegant and low-slung, the Sportbrake – or estate to most of us – creates something of an optical illusion because despite its lengthy profile it is actually a mere 5mms longer than the XF saloon.

And with only 70kg extra weight it means the Sportbrake can closely match the handling of its saloon stablemate yet offers a bigger, more practical load space and better rear headroom too.

Of course people generally buy estates because they need to shift stuff and in my case a trip to a certain Swedish ready-to-assemble furniture outlet was required.

The car has remote levers mounted in the boot area to lower the rear seats and create a vast load capacity, so the flatpacks were swallowed up by the big cat.

Floor rails are fitted to allow nets and load retainers to be fixed in place and the interior can be protected from mud, water and knocks with rubber or full waterproof liners.

XFbrake3The real surprise though was just how positively the loaded car performed and handled. It’s down to the fact that every derivative of the XF Sportbrake is fitted as standard with self-levelling air suspension at the rear to replace the coil springs fitted to the saloon.

This system has been developed and tuned by Jaguar’s chassis engineers to ensure the model offers identical ride and handling dynamics as the saloon, while keeping the car level even when fully laden.

Power for the Sportbrake, exclusively diesel, comes via 2.2 or 3.0-litre engines with a choice of outputs.

While the 3.0-litre unit is an outstanding engine, the lower capacity 163bhp 2.2-litre powering the tested model is fitted with Jaguar’s Intelligent Stop-Start system, making it the company’s most efficient powertrain to date.

It’s strong, efficient, clean, has plenty of punch and progresses smoothly via its eight-speed automatic gearbox, the only downside being a fair bit of diesel clatter, especially at low speed.

Otherwise you get classic XF experience – and that sense of automotive theatre that lets you both feel and see the car’s heart begin to beat as the Start button pulses red.

Press to fire up the engine and the rotary gearshift rises smoothly into the palm of your hand, the colour touch-screen at the centre of the dash bursts into life and the rotating air vents appear in unison from the fascia.

All models are well equipped with premium kit and fittings, the mid-range Luxury version coming with charcoal leather and carbon veneer. Prices are from £31,945 for the XF Sportbrake 2.2 D SE model.

  • SPEC CHECK

  • MAKE Jaguar.
  • MODEL XF 2.2D Sportbrake Luxury. 
  • ENGINE 2,179cc diesel.
  • POWER 163bhp at 3,500rpm.
  • PERFORMANCE 0-60 in 10.o secs, top speed 124mph.
  • ECONOMY 46.3mpg Urban, 62.8 Extra Urban, 55.4 Combined.
  • CO2 EMISSIONS 139g/km.
  • BiK RATING 22%
  • INSURANCE Group 33 (1-50)
  • PRICE £35,445 on the road.

  • WHAT’S HOT

  • Space, style, quality, image.
  • WHAT’S NOT
  • Noisy engine.
  • RATINGS  {rating}
  • LOOKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5
  • EQUIPMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
  • RIDE AND HANDLING . . . . . 4
  • PERFORMANCE . . . . . . . . . . 4
  • VALUE FOR MONEY . . . . . . . 5

XFbrake2

Tags: EstateJaguarSportbrakeXF

— Mike Torpey

Mike Torpey is freelance Motoring Editor of the Liverpool Echo, past Racing Editor and also a travel/golf writer, music reviewer and rock music nut. Tweet @michaeltorpey1

  • Previous story Land Rover’s wake-up call to rivals
  • Next story Honda Mean Mower cuts speed record

    Explore More

  • Volkswagen ID:7 – electric showstopper April 14, 2025
  • Skoda Octavia Estate – forever young October 8, 2024
  • Jaguar F-PACE – punch and panache April 29, 2024
  • MG5 electric – loads to love August 15, 2023

Leave a comment

Click here to cancel reply.
  • Recent

    • Lexus UX 300h – crossover classMay 20, 2025
    • Subaru Forester – best kept secretMay 8, 2025
    • Kia EV3 – world classApril 28, 2025
    • MG3 Hybrid+ – style and economyApril 23, 2025
    • Volkswagen ID:7 – electric showstopperApril 14, 2025
    • Audi A3 Sportback – timeless qualityMarch 28, 2025
    • 4×4
    • Commercial
    • Coupe
    • Executive
    • Hatchback
    • Saloon
    • Sports
    • SUV
  • More

    All First Drive Reviews All Road Test Reviews All News Features Click MUSIC for all our previous picks
  • Search

  • Home
  • Featured
  • Sportbrake has the XF factor
          • Home
          • Driven
          • News
          • Sitemap & Archive
          • Contact

          Copyright © 2014-15 CarReviewUK | Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy