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2008 Land Rover LR2 (03/27/2007)

2008 Land Rover LR2

Entered CNET Catalog: 03/27/2007

SKU: CARS2008LandRoverLR2

Manufacturer: Land Rover

Product summary

The goodThe good: The premium stereo in the 2008 Land Rover LR2 has very good audio quality and plays music from multiple sources. The navigation system uses an attractive interface while the car has all the off-road gear we expect in a Land Rover.

The badThe bad: We had some issues with the stereo and cell phone interfaces, which are confined to a two-line radio display while there is a perfectly good LCD at the top of the stack.

The bottom lineThe bottom line: We were very impressed with the 2008 Land Rover LR2, which combines solid cabin gadgetry with a luxury interior. And all this comfort rides on Land Rover's legendary off-road platform. At its price, it's a great value.

Average user rating: from 10 users
3.5 stars

Editors' review

  • Editors' Choice: No
  • Reviewed on: 04/02/2007

Photo gallery: 2008 Land Rover LR2
Photo gallery:
2008 Land Rover LR2

You could technically call the 2008 Land Rover LR2 a crossover, as it carries its SUV-like body on a smooth-riding independent suspension. But the LR2 comes with Land Rover's Terrain Response System and some pretty good off-road stats, such as 8.3 inches of ground clearance and the ability to wade through 19.7 inches of water. We were also pleased to see that Land Rover seriously upgraded its cabin electronics for the LR2 over what we've seen in other Land Rover models.

The LR2 shows many of the design cues of its bigger brothers. The roof of the cargo area lifts a little, similar to the Range Rover. And the grille has a similar crosshatched metal look as the Range Rover's. The LR2 shows off its Land Rover make well, even if you can see the top of the car while standing next to it.

With the LR2, Land Rover brought its electronics into the 21st century. The exquisite Alpine stereo plays MP3 and WMA CDs, and includes an auxiliary input. Past Land Rovers showed no compatibility with digital music. Although the navigation system still isn't integrated with other car systems, it presents a very nice interface similar to what we saw on the BMW 328xi. Best of all, our fully loaded review car came in under $40,000.

Test the tech: Supreme Court of Sound
We noticed prominent speakers mounted to the D pillars in the cabin of the 2008 Land Rover LR2 and figured this car must have an impressive stereo. A look at our spec sheet showed that the stereo is an Alpine 12 channel 440-watt Dolby ProLogic II 7.1 surround sound system with 12 speakers. A turn of the volume knob verified that this stereo would require some expert judgment. So we called in our Supreme Court of Sound, our golden ears, CNET MP3 player editors Donald Bell and Jasmine France, and Download.com Music editor Kurt Wolff.


Our Supreme Court of Sound lines up by the LR2.

We loaded our Court into the car and proceeded to drive around the streets of San Francisco. We subjected them to three songs: "Get Back," from The Beatles' Love CD; "Suite Guaracho Pt. 2," from Ursula 1000's Ursadelica, and "El Cuarto De Tula," from the Buena Vista Social Club CD. During our drive, members of the Court commented on the quality of the separation, how each instrument could be heard clearly. They also noted that the sound varied considerably from the back seat to the front, with the bass being stronger in the back.

Jasmine and Donald judged the backseat sound. Jasmine said, "the music was bright and bassy overall, but I got a lot of high-end detail and clarity." Donald commented on how he could feel the bass from the subwoofer through the back of the seat, yet it still felt restrained. Donald pointed out that "the sound was rich and balanced and I was surprised at how much detail I could pick out in the music." Kurt noted, "In the front seat, the separation was pretty intense, more so than I ever get on my home stereo; the bass seemed a bit weak up front and far stronger, bigger, and roomier in the back."

The Court was generally impressed with the audio quality, although at high volume they pointed out that it was potentially too bright. The Court's critical ears gave the audio quality an overall rating of 7.5, a respectable rating.

In the cabin
As we would expect for a Land Rover, the cabin of the LR2 is luxurious, with quality materials and good fit and finish throughout. But we wouldn't necessarily expect this comfortable of an interior from a car with a base price of $34,700--from that perspective the LR2 was off to a good start

The LR2 includes a nice list of standard cabin features, such as leather seats, a front power sunroof, a fixed sunroof over the rear seat, and dual zone climate control. To start the car, the key fob must be inserted into a slot in the dashboard, at which point you can push the engine start button.

Our LR2 came with the $3,500 Technology Package, which adds navigation, the premium stereo mentioned above, and Bluetooth cell phone integration. Besides a few minor issues, we like this set of electronics. We would prefer if there were better integration between these systems--as it is, the LCD at the top of the stack only shows navigation, while a radio display set lower is used to show audio and phone information. It would be nice to see audio tracks and phonebook entries on that nice, roomy LCD.


With a Dolby ProLogic II 7.1 surround sound system, the LR2 made some impressive noise.

The stereo is excellent not only for its audio quality, but for its capabilities. It comes with Sirius satellite radio, which is always nice, and a six-disc in-dash changer. Better yet, this changer reads MP3 and WMA CDs. And the radio display not only shows track, artist, and album information for MP3 and WMA files, it also shows that information for standard CDs formatted with CD text.

For MP3 players, there is an auxiliary audio input placed conveniently at the back of the center console, making it easy to keep the patch cable clear of the driver's space. Another interesting feature of the Technology Package is the rear seat audio controls set at the back of the console. These controls let rear seat passengers plug in headphones and control any CDs in the changer.


Once you program a destination, the navigation system lets you choose from three routes.

The navigation system uses nice, bright graphics on its touch-screen LCD, and an innovative menu system. The buttons for destination entry and other navigation settings slide into view from the left side of the screen when you push the Menu button. This theme is used for the various submenus, as well, and the graphic design of these buttons is pleasing. Destination entry is easy, and the system gives you a choice of three routes.

One particularly nice feature, which we have frequently thought would be helpful, is a button to find the nearest freeway on-ramp or exit. Route guidance is also very good, with a split screen showing complex freeway junctions on the right side of the screen. As the voice prompts, in a pleasant female voice, guided us along our route, we missed the voice from previous Land Rovers that sounds like a British World War II officer. Under the Language menu, we were able to switch our voice prompt from American English to U.K. English, but we only ended up with a pleasant female voice with a mild English accent. People learning another language have great variety to choose from under the Language menu, including German, French, and Spanish. Our one issue with the navigation system is that the points-of-interest database didn't include individual retail stores, although it did have a good list of grocery stores.


The cell phone integration was very good, listing recent calls and copying over the phone book.

The Bluetooth cell phone integration also worked very well in the LR2. We paired up a Samsung D807 to the system without a problem. The big number pad below the radio display in the LR2 made it easy to dial numbers, although we would have preferred a voice-dialing system. The system does show useful lists like recent calls, and it can copy the phone's address book over. Call quality sounded good through the car's speakers.

One other small complaint about the interior of the LR2: the radio display and the gauges are subject to bad glare, and can be hard to read in bright sunlight. The gauges are small white numbers on a black background, which easily gets washed out. Same with the radio display, which is black on green.

Under the hood
We were intrigued by the LR2's engine after reading about it on the spec sheet. The LR2 uses a transversely mounted 3.2-liter inline six cylinder, which puts out 230 horsepower and 234 lb-ft of torque. While these numbers aren't overwhelming, we were interested to see if this relatively small engine could move the LR2 adequately while getting decent gas mileage.

We weren't disappointed in the engine's power. The LR2 isn't going to win drag races, but it can be made to move fast off the line, and works well in passing maneuvers. We tried it on a few steep hills around San Francisco, and it climbed them easily. Unfortunately, we don't have fuel economy numbers on this car. It's a 2008, and the EPA hasn't posted numbers for its new test. Also, we only had the LR2 in for a few days, which we didn't feel was adequate time to judge the fuel economy. We can only speculate that an engine of this size should rate around 20mpg, give or take 3mpg.


Even though the LR2 is the baby Land Rover, it still comes with the Terrain Response System.

We were happy with the transmission in the LR2. It's a six-speed automatic with three settings: drive, sport, and manual selection. Its shifts were smooth and barely noticeable, and it downshifted appropriately as we began hill ascents on the highway. In drive mode, we noticed the transmission kept the tachometer around 2,000 to 2,500 RPM, whether we were on city streets or the freeway.

The LR2, as we would expect for a Land Rover, features solid off-roading gear. Its all-wheel-drive is full-time, and it has Land Rover's Terrain Response System. The driver gets a dial in front of the shifter that can be turned among four settings for normal roads, gravel, snow, or sand. Each setting puts different torque characteristics to the wheels and can raise the suspension.

Handling on the LR2 was as we would expect for an SUV. It feels a little top-heavy on the corners, but the steering is tight and accurate. The LR2 comes with loads of road-holding and safety gear. Along with its anti-lock brakes, it gets stability control, roll control, cornering brake control, and an emergency brake assist system. And it also gets a special hill descent-control mode, useful on- and off-road.

In sum
Our 2008 Land Rover LR2 SE had a base price of $34,700. The $3,500 Technology Package brought in all of our favorite tech, such as navigation, a premium stereo, and cell phone integration. The $1,050 Lighting Package added bi-xenon headlights and made them adaptive. Finally, the $700 Cold Climate Package included heated seats and a heated front windshield. That put the total for our test car at $39,950, just shy of $40,000.

We were very impressed with the LR2. It was good to see that Land Rover upgraded the cabin electronics over models we saw last year. And at the price it's an excellent value. The LR2 seems more rugged and is less expensive than either the Infiniti FX45, yet offers a similar feeling of luxury. The LR2's closest competitor in price and gear is the Acura MDX, but we would lean towards the more serious off-road gear and more refined electronics of the LR2.

User opinions

Select a User Opinion to view: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Great SUV off road

Pros: Running around in the Mountains - snow-mud. Very capable and a joy to drive. As we were going down the muddy and rutty road never once felt out of control. Hill Decent Controller guided us down a road covered by 6 inches of snow rocks mud and water.

Cons: The rear sunroof does not open.

Review: We love our LR2 it looks good and, so far, is sound. No problems at all.
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Want it all, get an LR2

Pros: The ride characteristics are fabulous, the interior is simply put... perfect. There are no blind spots if properly shoulder checking, and sight lines are great. I love this car as much 1 year and 5 months after I bought it, I am just as happy today

Cons: I am not thrilled that I have a mesh blind on the sunroof, the bluetooth is picky it only likes Motorola products. I've tried Nokia, Blackberry, Samsung, and Sony... only Nokia would sink but wouldn't work. Wish the washer jets were in the wipers.

Review: Bottom line, this is the best vehicle I've ever owned. I absolutely love this car, my family loves it, and my friends love it. It seats 5 very comfortably, it provides an amazingly smooth ride and the transmission is seamless in gear shifts. I wish there was a better connection for the bluetooth but I have changed my phone not my car. I think that this vehicle is absolutely bang on for its price and the value. It is worth the extra few dollars to move up to a Land Rover. The service is fantastic, the vehicle is great, and I love driving it every day.
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

I abolutely love my LR2...period

Pros: it's very nimble whether in traffic or parking, very comfortable to drive, excellent in both wet and snowy weather. Stereo system sound great. all maintenance covered for 40k miles, extended warranty available for $1600. that takes you to 100k miles

Cons: average 20 mpg, (although at 55 mph I get 25 mpg) rear section could be a little bigger

Review: It's a nice, comfortable, well made small SUV. Its easy to drive and manuever, handles all types of weather very predictably, relatively good gas mileage. Plus, I find it to be distinctively styled and it stands out in a crowd. If I totaled it tomorrow I'd go out a buy another just like it without hesitation and I've never felt that way about other cars I've owned.
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

I recently went from a BMW X3 to the LR2

Pros: Between the two vehicles, you get a lot more for your money, and a great ride

Cons: Could do better on the gas mileage, but it's an SUV, not a mini-cooper.

Review: Over all , this is nice ride, great value for the number of nice options, and it is a great looking car. 4 years and 50,000 mile warranty is comparable to BMW's warranty.
User Rating:
0.5 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Dont Buy this car

Pros: nice interior

Cons: Car is unreliable, unsafe

Review: This is my second brand new LR2 in one year. The first one needed a transmission overhaul after 2 weeks and they gave me a new one. This one has overheated while driving twice! This weekend it started to overheat while driving and I had to pull over b/c smoke was coming out of the hood!
User Rating:
3.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Reliability vs. Tech, LR2 probably wasn't that great

Pros: Good Tech., good price

Cons: Too plastic interior (dashboard), and potentially pool reliability.

Review: Although, LR2 provides good technologies along with a decent price but it might comes with a potential cost. 1st. we will have to question the reliability of LR2. From the history of Land Rover, the reliabiluty wasn't that well. Actually, its reliability is very awful. Although, Land Rover keeps on saying that LR2 is not Freelander, but they are very much similar to each other. 2nd. The fuel efficiency of LR2 is pool for a 2008 car. Lastly, for a 3.2L car, 230 hp @ 6300 rpm is pathetic for Land Rover's reputation. Look at the same class cross-over, such as Infiniti EX35 (3.5L, 297 hp @ 6800 rpm). BMW X3 (3.0L, 260 hp @ 6600 rpm), Acura RDX (2.3L, 240 hp @ 6000 rpm), and Lexus RX 350 (3.5L, 270 hp @ 6200 rpm). Although, the reliability of LR2 may potentially become a huge problem and expense, the tech. section of LR2 is very attractive to many buyer. That is the tradeoff the buyer will have to consider before purchasing this vehicle.
User Rating:
3.5 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Nice, but with a few flaws

Pros: Good looks, Compact size

Cons: serious bluetooth issues, windscreen glare, storage

Review: While it is everything I looked for driving wise, some small issues make it very irritating. The Bluetooth does not work with any Windows Mobile smartphones. The cold climate package has a windscreen with wires runnign thur it which causes a glare at night from oncoming vehicles or from sunlight, no storage compartments for driver. The music system requires 2 clicks for most functions.
No keyless entry/start and the fob is in a very inconvenient location which makes putting it in and out a pain.
User Rating:
5.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

This is a great car in all respects.

Pros: Beautiful interior. Stand out exterior

Cons: Key fob takes getting used to..but Ok

Review: Purchased 2008 LR2 HSE. Drove it in icy and dry weather. Very impressed with interior. Ride very solid. Have absolutely no problem with engine power. Great visibility. Bluetooth works fine with my Verizon phone. Also radio is best I have ever owned which includes Mercedes, Lexus and Bimmer. Navigation system is also very good.
User Rating:
3.0 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Great ride, great handling, plenty of room. SE Tech is the way to go, lot of features user-friendly.

Pros: Smooth ride. Great handling. User Friendly Navigation/Bluetooth Technology

Cons: Gas mileage not great

Review:
User Rating:
4.5 stars

out of 10 user reviews

Everything that I expected

Pros: A joy to drive

Cons: Some storage bins would be nice along with a larger gas tank

Review: I got my LR2 a month ago. So far, I really enjoy it. My mileage has been just under 21 MPG, which is a big improvement for me having moved from a full sized pick up to this vehicle. I have to get used to a lot less room, and the one thing I miss is a storage bin of some sort between the front seats.. I have all of the options and everything has been working without a problem.

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