It’s finally here. After all the drama, all the teasers, all the leaked images and suspected spec sheets and armchair conjecture — the all-new 2020 Land Rover Defender has been revealed in all its glory.
Visually speaking, it’s hard not to see it as a significant break from the Defenders of yore. Then again, given the myriad challenges facing designers today that were still decades in the future when the first version was penned back around the turn of the ’80s — fuel efficiency requirements and crash test standards foremost among them — the changes aren’t all that surprising.
The basic proportions of the two launch models — as suspected, a two-door model called the Defender 90 and a four-door one dubbed Defender 110, though their actual wheelbases are 101.9 and 119 inches, respectively — are unmistakably Land Rover, but the curved bow and squared-off headlamps are distinctly new to the Defender. We’ll reserve our final judgement until we can see it in person, but considering how well Mercedes-Benz managed to update the G-Class for the modern era without sacrificing the SUV’s iconic boxy style, we can’t help wishing Land Rover had hewed a little closer to tradition.
Land Rover is making sure buyers will have plenty of ways to tweak and tune the looks of their Defenders to their personal tastes. Seven metallic paints and 12 different wheels are available, including sweet-looking 18-inch steelies sure to be the choice of true off-roaders and 22-inch alloy rims sure to be the darling of the Rodeo Drive set. The Defender will also offer a factory-spec protective wrap that gives the metallic paint a satin finish, one that also provides an added layer of protection from scuffs and scratches.
If that’s not enough, the Defender offers a choice of four so-called Accessory Packs, which add features and details for different lifestyles. There’s the Urban Pack, which adds exterior brightwork (and seems likely to result in having insults hurled your way from other Defender owners); there’s the Explorer Pack, which adds a roof rack and side-mounted gear carrier, spare tire cover, wheel arch protection and matte black hood decal; there’s the Adventure Pack, which also includes the side-mounted gear carrier but adds on a 1.7-gallon pressurized water reservoir and a trunk-mounted air compressor; and there’s the Country Pack, which mixes and matches from the above by including the wheel arch protectors, rinse system and shiny rear scuff plate, while also bringing a trunk partition to the mix to cordon off the 34 cubic feet of cargo space found on the 110.
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