Looking at the pics under the camo and now the interior/dash, the following is just my personal take on the prevailing design philosophy here, incase if one currently exists at LR, that is
Looking at this thing from various angles in the pix as well as the undercarriage, what I see is this: Instead of following a natural evolutionary and modernization process (both mechanical and visual) to bring this brand identifying icon (wether LR likes this fact or not) current and into the 21st century while conforming to the modern world visual standards, and while still maintaining, if not enhancing, its existing functionalities and offroad capabilities and capacities, the silhouette that I see here rather presents a struggle between two isolated school of thoughts, and an utter disregard for the engineering department.
The outcome here seems to be the result of two opposing design forces that are at clash here at LR. The distinct tapering roofline up front, alpine window, the classic’ish dashboard layout, the belt line’ vertical curving up to the window lines, the tailgate mounted spare, etc, seems to represents the group at LR that says “Hey, we need to make this thing carry over some of the original visual design cues, it needs to look like the original in some ways or we will get too much bad press if it doesnt look anything like the original Defender.
On the other hand, the slightly tapering roofline in the rear, the recent LR signature higher belt line, rounded front/rear skirt corners, etc. has McGovern written all over it as his definition of “modern” is tapering rooflines, boat-like bowing rear ends, practically no sidewall tire/rim combo with sizing from Mars, and higher belt lines, regardless of the significantly reduced outer visibility from inside the cabin as well as cargo room, etc., let alone the proper tire/rim sizing.
This second camp at LR also seems to include the fearful beancounters who’s primary concern here is not the rebirth of an icon but the mass appeal as this group doesn’t believe in spending a single dollar in educating the potential customer about the engineering and the resulting benefits its own products have to offer. Rather, this group would very much prefer and feel more safe by just following the prevailing trends/fads as well as dumping millions of valuable R&D dollars into creating TV ads showing a red RR Sport climbing up the steep steps or finishing a high altitude run while still wearing tire/wheel combo with practically zero sidewall, and/or with specially created tire for similar marketing/events runs. And no one knows how many of those low profile tires (being carried by a pickup truck behind that sleek looking red rover) they have destroyed while filming these runs. And of course that hard to read fine print (which is called the “Legal line” or “disclaimer” in the advertising business) describing the real facts of life saves their day
Never in the history of automotive design (or anything else for that matter) a complete redesign of an icon has looked great unless the redesign process itself has stayed trued to the “Form follows Function/Purpose” principle. In fact, the very reason for an original product or design to become successful, an icon itself, to begin with is the fact that a Form-follows-function school was followed while designing it.
The above is the main reason why a Ferrari or a Lamborghini from 1980s still looks visually as beautiful as their modern evolutions.
The original Defender was not trying to look like a previous model (as it didn’t exist yet) or was trying to be like something else, and that is the main reason it became a visual icon.
The LR3 was an excellent example of this evolutionary process (despite some mid-process interruptions as far as the engineering work). It wasn’t trying to look like the Discovery I/II (icons themselves) by hinting back to series II’s exterior design and interior dash layout, rather it simply built and improved upon the original functionalities of series I and II and brought an original icon into then modern world, and with such a brute engineering/tech force that the competitors were compelled to follow.
Since LR3 designers/engineers were not trying to make it look/work like its processor series II, they came up with some clever ideas, ideas like moving the spare from up top on the tailgate to down under. I know some here will disagree with me on this but please allow me the opportunity to convey my thoughts on this.
I think that was an excellent idea but unfortunately it wasn’t followed thru and fully realized.
The move of the spare to the undercarriage brought the center of gravity further down and closer to the ground. But unfortunately the whole idea became useless as the full size spare reduced the rear departure angle, as if the engineers didn’t have enough time to work this out. This whole thing feels almost like as if mid-developevent process someone from the bean counting department showed up on the engineering R&D floor and said: “Mates, thats it, times up, we need to start shipping this thing now, so just wrap it up wherever you are.”
If they had been successful in finishing up this improvement before the launch/shipping began, it would have been an excellent improvement. And then the next natural thing for LR would have been to introduce a reasonably priced rear bumper/lower tailgate accessory for the owners to be able to mount a second spare (yes, they would have had to make the rear bumper/lower tailgate stronger, etc.) The ability of carrying two spares would have more than satisfied an off-road enthusiast and would have earned some great respect as well as press too by having introduced another factory first, like the TerrainResponse.
Despite being partly accomplished, the spare' move to under the truck gave birth to that extremely useful/functional asymmetrical rear tailgate. It gave this model of LR a distinct and instantly recognizable rear end look due to that stepped rear window design that complimented the SUV' distinct stepped roof line.
Regardless of the unfinished bits business like the spare' position, etc., the overall improvements upon the existing functionalities were the main reason why LR3 itself became a visual icon, superseding even its predecessor in many ways. A 2006 LR3 parked on the tarmac, still looks every bit as modern as it did back on its launch date. Same cannot be said for many cars/SUVs, regardless of their categories.
Mercedes had an amazing opportunity here for their G-box, they didn’t have the pressure of satisfying the mass-appeal for the redesign, but unfortunately they went the route of playing too-safe and basically blew it and lost an amazing opportunity there.
This weekend I was actually checking one out parked on the street. Looks good. I prolly would stop by their dealership just to check it out as its way out of my budget. But I wouldn’t mind keeping an open mind for exploring a used one down the line. I am sure it would be more reliable than any pre-owned (or even a new) LR product. Or maybe Toyota/Lexus will have come back to their senses by then and would have brought it down a notch or two on those crazy, way over the top, pizza oven looking front ends (with unnecessary over extended front/rear overhangs) on their LX and GX
