Take Two: 2020 Range Rover Evoque Bows in Chicago With New Platform, Engines

Steph Willems
by Steph Willems

No longer sharing bits sourced from former owner Ford, Land Rover’s smallest Range Rover-badged vehicle undergoes a comprehensive revamp for 2020. There’s a new, stiffer platform underneath and, while its overall footprint remains pretty much the same, a wheelbase stretch affords occupants a smidgen of extra room to stretch out.

First appearing on our shores in late 2011 as a 2012 model, the compact Evoque offered buyers a cheaper way to enter the tweedy brand. U.S. sales peaked in 2015; not a good thing in a market fueled by crossover lust.

For the second-generation Evoque, Land Rover sought to up the premium feel, shifting the little ute’s design in the direction of its Velar big brother (notice the flush door handles) and swapping in two home-built turbocharged 2.0-liter powerplants.

Gone is the old 240-horsepower unit, replaced by Ingenium motors boasting 246 hp and 269 lb-ft, and 296 hp and 295 lb-ft, respectively. The latter engine arrives with a 48-volt mild hybrid system attached, with a belt-driven starter-generator recouping power lost during braking and adding some of it back under acceleration. A ZF nine-speed automatic handles the shifting for both mills.

First offered in the 2020 Evoque, Land Rover’s ClearSight Ground View feature turns the vehicle’s hood transparent (when viewed on the upper 10-inch touchscreen), allowing drivers to monitor what’s going on beneath the front of their vehicle during off-road excursions. It could prove handy in locating your neighbor’s pets and kids, too.

The following scene is not something you can expect to see in real life:

With all-wheel drive standard on all Evoques, Driveline Disconnect juggles the traction duties, lighting up the front and rear axle as needed. An adaptive suspension joins the equipment roster for 2020.

Pricing starts at $43,645 (after destination) for a base Evoque S, with the five-trim range topping out at $56,795 R-Dynamic HSE. The 2020 model arrives at Jaguar Land Rover dealers in the U.S. this spring.

[Images: Jaguar Land Rover, Tim Healey/TTAC]

Steph Willems
Steph Willems

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  • Akear Akear on Feb 09, 2019

    Surely, this is the world's best looking SUV.

  • Kyree Kyree on Feb 10, 2019

    The outgoing (first-gen) Range Rover has already started using the JLR homegrown engines, instead of the Ford 2.0. I think it was in 2017 or 2018 when they made the switch. In a move that should surprise no one, the Coupe and Convertible models—the former of which was discontinued circa 2017—will not make it to the new generation.

  • Lorenzo The Longshoreman/philosopher Eri Hoffer postulated "Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and ends up as a racket." That pretty much describes the progression of the United Auto Workers since World War II, so if THEY are the union, the answer is 'no'.
  • Redapple2 I think I ve been in 100 plants. ~ 20 in Mexico. ~10 Europe. Balance usa. About 1/2 nonunion. I supervised UAW skilled trades guys at GM Powertrain for 6 years. I know the answer.PS- you do know GM products - sales weighted - average about 40% USA-Canada Content.
  • Jrhurren Unions and ownership need to work towards the common good together. Shawn Fain is a clown who would love to drive the companies out of business (or offshored) just to claim victory.
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  • Redapple2 .....styling has moved into [s]exotic car territory[/s] tortured over done origami land.  There; I fixed it. C 7 is best looking.
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