Had a 1990 Daimler XJ40 - 5 meters of understated pose & presences. "The seas would part" when driving it, trucks, cars would get out or give you rite of way. Long, sleek, floated along, just style & class. Without a doubt the XJ shape is globally instantly recognizable at any distance, its a jag even if you nothing about cars people just know. Had it for 4yrs, never missed a beat or let me down in that whole time. Only reason let it go was its size, was like keeping a Great Dane in an apartment.
A lot of Jaguar enthusiasts seem to dislike the taller body of the all-new aluminium X350 and to *really* dislike the radical Callum styling of the X351. For them, the XJ should be more like this XJ40 or like the X300 or like the X308! "Very long, very low, very sleek" indeed as Matt says.
Yeah, and those enthusiasts wouldn't put their hands in their pockets for a new Jaguar anyway so their opinion is worth as much as the contents of their damp handkerchiefs.
@@E34Benzinwrong,x350 is the last proper jag.i have 2 series 3s,3 xj40s,1x300,2308s,1 xf and 2 x350s,still have tge 2nd one,a super v8 and believe me when i say they are the best jaguars ever made.beautifully made with superb materials and build and just the right amount of technology.personally excepting the 308 its alkso the best looking jag made.everything since,nah.
It's amazing to see a XJ40 (or Daimler) in showroom condition like this! A not inconsiderable number of them seem to be more than a little worse for wear for their years. To see one that looks like brand new inside and out is quite the revelation! 😊
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 This “unreliable” label is just not true. This is proven by the fact that many cars were totally abused and still made it to 150,000 miles +
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24 OK, so I’m a “wannabe Cockney gangster” (I’ve owned 5 XJ40’s), but at least I’m not a backwards baseball cap 🧢 wearing 🔔 end, who’s never heard of indicators, who drives Mercedes / BMW / Audi! 🤷🏻♂️🤣
My grandparents were serial Mercedes-Benz buyers. They went on a short trip with friends who had purchased a new Jaguar. My grandfather was very impressed and took one on a test drive when it was time to trade. He purchased it and within the first year and 20,000 miles it had significant issues. Mostly electrical issues but also a complete failure of the HVAC system in Tempe Arizona when the temperature was 110° F. He was driving home one day after playing golf in the car lost all power and had to be towed. The problem was an intake valve had been installed on the exhaust side and had burnt up and broken. By the time it happened, the car was 7,000 out of warranty. Jaguar refused responsibility so my Grandfather paid to have it repaired drove it to the Mercedes-Benz dealer traded it and never entertained the thought of buying a Jaguar again!
@taunuslunatic404 He certainly did and whenever he saw one on the road or walked past a parked one he always had a look on his face like he had just smelled something disagreeable!
Great video! I am the proud owner of a 1987 (early spec) 3,6 XJ 40 in glorious sage green metallic. A real headturner and a big powerful beast...goes like a bomb and just *glides* over our rotten, potholy roads. Love the Jaaaag!!!❤
As a former X300 owner, I can add that the right-and-left burlwood door panels are cut from the same piece of wood. The grain in fact matches on the doors. Cool fun fact.
Americans say 'burl', because they are ignorant. English speaking peoples use the correct term - burr walnut. Unless you are going to also say 'aluminum' and 'sodder' instead of solder, if I were you, I'd be the one limiting my proactive ignorance.
That model is often maligned for it's squared off design, but it looks surprisingly elegant in the shade of dark metallic green. Love the drone footage Matt!
A truly fabulous creation. The cabin is almost a space of spiritual refuge. Contrast this with many new cars; I sat in a friend's Tesla recently and found myself losing the will to live.
The minimalist interior of the Tesla matches the minimalist industrial-styled apartment of the Tesla owner: concrete walls, rectangular white sofa, monochrome floor coverings etc. I imagine the typical Jaguar owner has ornate rugs on the floor, walnut bookcases, a chaise longue, Queen Anne chairs, oil paintings etc! Some of which may or may not be "borrowed". (Sorry I don't know much about interior design terminology.) Personally I can't think of anything worse than living in a minimalist industrial-styled apartment, but it takes all sorts. 🙂
Love the XJ40 range and actually preferred the big ( fish tank ) headlights rather than the quad set up on lower spec and Sport models. This is a proper Jaguar , end of. I don’t know what Sir William Lyon’s would have thought of all these diesel/ SUVs/ electric stuff which has materialised over the last few years , such a far cry from their intended heritage.
He would have looked at what would sell. If it was going to make money for the company he'd tell his staff to crack on. Lyons was a very unsentimental businessman. He was always looking ahead, not burying the company in the past. Something which tends to be completely lost on too many Jaguar fans crying about the likes of the X351 or the I-PACE and blithering on about 'heritage'.
@@mrdainaseheritage is very important and todays jags have lost all that so have unfortunatley lost me.i have my x350 and thats as new as i will be going.i did have a xf for a few years.very nice car but not got the specialness of the older jags.
@@ivanfernyhough3851 No, you're simply stuck in the past and can't move on. If Lyons' had been as sentimental the business would never have left Bloomfield Road.
@@V8_screw_electric_cars Again, you're another putting your own bias with no foundation. Lyons always looked ahead and saw the value of innovation. When he ran the company it brought out a twin-cam engine, developed disc brake technology and brought in monocoque construction. It launched cars that didn't hark back 50 years to a long-obsolete model. The E-Type was a spaceship in '61, not a re-hash of the XK120. The great shame about Jaguar is how no-one took it over who continued his ideals. If that had happened the XJ40 would have pursued a completely different path and the company would not have become little more than a tribute act of its Sixties models.
Good times. I had three XJ-40's at one point. All were the TWR version, badged as XJR. This got you special Speedline alloys, a bodykit, an uprated ECU for the engine and the gearbox + suspension mods including bilstein dampers. I have not seen one for many a year so I have to content myself with a TWR kitted Rx-7 as consolation.
This shows what a properly maintained XJ40 can be like, whilst most were killed off by penny pinching owners when they reached 10 years old and were available for £1000. An absolutely gorgeous car and having owned 2 and some earlier & later XJ's the 40 has always been my favourite. A good one rides like no other car and even an average one is a pleasure to drive. Auto is the only choice to me though, changing gear just takes the edge off the utter waft experience of owning and driving a Jag. Yes there's a place for manuals in lesser cars but I'm sorry its not in anything that came from Browns Lane.
I had a Daimler 4.0 XJ40, one of the last off the line in 1994 and had been owned by a Jaguar Executive no less. Picked it up for £3500, not bad for a car that had been serviced at Browns Lane for the first 5 years of its life. The last 2 years of the XJ40 were the best, thanks to the Ford money they were built like tanks. I now have a X358, one of the last built of those. I love the X358, but although a better car than the XJ40 I don't think it's a better Jaguar.
That kickdown noise (and the indicator noise!) brought back memories of my late Father's 3.6 Sovereign. It was a truly lovely car and basically as per this test one except no cd changer (E-reg, perhaps not offered then?). Oh, it had the slightly odd digital dahs as well, that was always criticised, but we had no problems with it. Sadly the car rusted badly, but it did live to a very high mileage and did top out on a few occasions on the autobahns! I really should look out for one of these again - they have a great appeal. Thanks for the great video!
I love this car. They are beautiful. I remember when they were new. The Volvo dealer also sold Jaguar. These earlier cars were all 6 cylinder because the engineers deliberately designed an engine bay that could not hold any V engine. They were dead set that the Rover V8 would not find its way under the bonnet. Here in Canada, we did not see the Daimler. What was a Daimler in England was sold as the Vanden Plas. That wood inlay is parquetry, not marquetry. Marquetry is pictures made in pieces of wood.
The 'won't fit a V8' story is a myth. The Rover V8 would fit(ish), but they were never actually asked to try, as stated by several people in Jaguar. You can thank Bob Knight and his expert politicking within BL while he was in charge for that.
My dad had one of these, a (used) company car in about 1994 following a Bristol 409. He had it for about five years, and it taught him new things, such as the concept of ‘Limp mode’. Was subsequently replaced by an 80 series Land Cruiser, which he still has 24 years later
When I was a contractor working for Lucas in Birmingham back in the early 90s I remember seeing rows of those instrument clusters on test in environmental test chambers. I also saw a pre-production V12 one in the workshop on one visit.
Had an XJ81 (XJ40 6litre V12) for 14 years bought at 18 months old at half the new price. A few problems over the years but with the lower suspension of that model along with the lattice allows and four headlights it was much admired. Sold it to someone who was intending to do it up but after standing on his driveway deteriorating for a year it disappeared, presumably scrapped or sold for parts.
Finally you test drive my favourite make of car. I have been passionate about them since my late father bought a Mark 2 in 1966. I have owned four Jags since more than any other marque and the first one was a gunmetal grey Mark 2 3.8litre.
Many years ago I had a 1988 one (with the gas fluorsacent display which never quite worked) and the Citroen style self levelling rear suspension . Lovely wafty thing with a surprising acceperation (and thirst).
This year I had a 308 sport. It was a dream to have, no problems and my family knew it was my dream car. Went back to my other dream car, my freelander 1 , life is good. Typically on a long drive, the mpg is almost similar 🤷 Great stuff Matt 👍
My brother bought an 94 xj gold after a few quenchers on ebay on a bank holiday, he'd lend it to me when my car was in the garage, lovely to drive, 11 mpg and questionably electrics. Sometimes the radio and heater fan wouldn't work until you touched the headlight switch
This is actually my favourite Jaguar saloon design. Even without the fluted front-end, I think the front and the rear work so well together. The driving position is also very cosseting and sporty. Having owned a Mk1 Rover 827 Sterling and an 827 SLi Coupe, I know all too well the good things about them, and I chose my 800 Coupe over one of these. Back in the day, the Mk1 827 won a shootout with the 2.9 XJ6. And the 827 Coupe was favourably reviewed by Bentley owners. Even Clarkson's first review of the Coupe was very favourable, although later he changed his mind. The MK1 800s and these both suffered badly from rust, and that's very much the main thing to look out for. It's very hard to find an example that isn't or wasn't a rust bucket, although good clean ones do come up from time to time. Of course, these are still relatively plentiful, as opposed to Mk1 and even Mk2 Rover 800s. If I didn't live in London, I'd probably have a late XJ40 (or an X300, even though I actually prefer the XJ40's styling) as my main car, assuming I didn't do many miles.
AHHHH!!!! You profile my own car (well, the model)!! I've loved this car since before it was introduced and the spy photos of weather testing disguised prototypes in Arizona and Northern Ontario. Not a daily driver even in the US, but a lovely long-distance cruiser. Unloved by most who remember the Series III, but this car took Jaguar forward. It was modern looking and forward thinking. Unfortunately the long gestation period shortened its shelf life somewhat. Ford investment did improve the factory, production line, etc., but I remember seeing the X300 in January 1995 in Toronto, and thought, I don't like that facelift. Lowering and widening the grille of a wide car made the X300 look too wide. And Dearborn's meddling / directive's in Jaguar styling never produced anything exciting, design wise. It's as if the money men's concept of Britain was based on the original 1960s Avengers, and the X300 styling attempt to harken back to the stunning Series III was not successful. When the XJs finally got the investment of an all new replacement car, the 2004 X350 did look attractive with styling that is much better balanced. And despite being excellent, it was too outdated. Of course Ford jetisoned Jaguar right before it hit the ground running with exceptionally modern and contemporary styling when Ian Callum's XF was released, burying the interesting but excessively retro S-Type, and in my opinion, I like the greater freedom of design that TATA's ownership of the company has yielded. And, hah, I absolutely cringe when people call it a "Jag" or "Jag-wire". I do call it by the American pronunciation "JAG-Wahr" for three reasons. That is the pronunciation used in USA marketing at the time. Using a British pronunciation makes me sound affected and pretentious. And as is often pointed out, the animal it is named after is native to the Americas. Yeah, the company pronounces "Jag-U-Ar", including contemporary marketing, but I'll only change if I get a more recent one to keep mine company. Love this car!!!!
Lovely to see and great that people are keeping these cars alive. For me this generation is not my favorite, the curves of the XJ were rather out of style at that time and so the more squarer style does not stand up that well. I think I would rather go for the later x350 alloy versions which are criminally cheap to buy (even good ones). I keep looking at them but what puts me off is on a couple of occasions I have shown interest in one the owner grabs me and asks if I want to buy it!
I must say the looks of the XJ40 have grown on me over the years - I thought it was a bit too square when it came out in the mid-1980s but I prefer it to the cars that replaced it, which to me were trying to recapture the Series 3, although that in itself wasn't such a bad thing.
Very nice. I had a 3.6 xj40, followed by an x300 xjr then my final Jag was an x350 tdv6. The xj40 was the most sublimely comfortable car. The x300 xjr was an absolute blast,so much fun. The x350 was great on fuel. I spent a lot of time out in Germany and was able to unleash them on the autobhan. My favourite was the xj40,just, over the x300 xjr. The x350 was a good car but:1,I should have bought the v8 and,2, it just lacked something of the earlier models, even the air suspension was not able to provide the comfort of the xj40. I miss the first two, but not the x350! Models after the x350 have just not appealed to ne.
Back in period, I did borrow one of these from our local dealer to demonstrate to a client customer whilst working for a leasing company. Sadly it was a 2.9 L version, which did feel a bit flat and I recall it was manual with cloth trim so not the best combination. The customer however, was still blown away but in fairness he was driving a Montego Vanden Plas!
I bought one of these in 1990. Metallic blue with barley interior. Beautiful. Turned out to be the worst car I've ever owned. Electrical problems galore & when the crankshaft came loose that was the final straw. The Lexus LS400 came out at the same time for less $! Boy did I make a mistake not buying that but in 1992 I rectified that & bought the Lexus I should have 2 years earlier & never looked back. Lexus is the best...period!
Fortunately, these days, the good ones that are left are often in the hands of enthusiasts that know how to prevent the problems you experienced. Corrosion is often due to blocked drainage points, and electrical problems are usually caused by defective dry solder joints in the respective modules. That said, the enthusiast owned cars now would be subject to a much easier life than the daily drivers in the past.
Love me some XJ40, I am celebrating my 25th year owning my USA market 1994 XJ81 V12. Its not going anywhere, and its starting to get some honks and thumbs up from passers by now that it didn't get 10 years ago. I think they are finally entering "classic" territory, or at least there are so few nice ones left that people just don't see them and therefore they think they are special now.
THANK YOU so much for such a dignified and positive review of this car. Too many critical and negative videos out there on this model. I have a '92 VDP "Majestic" here in the US (or Daimler in the UK) - it's great!
It's true that jaguar didn't want the rover V8. My BIL was on the design team. He also worked on the V12 conversion where his job was reversing the AC system to make room in the engine bay
@@furiousdriving Jaguar had a long-standing antipathy to V8 engines through Bill Heynes and Bob Knight amongst others. It was a shame in a way as it spelt the death knell for the Turner designed V8 engines when they bought Daimler. While the 2.5 did find its way into the Mk2, the larger 4.0 died away, which was a lost opportunity. As for the V8 story, the matter simply wasn't pushed by BL, but the engine bay could take a V8 block as numerous US conversions have proved.
Preferred the styling of the 3.2 (had two of them - not at the same time) but wanted the 4.0 engine; apparently it was designed as a 4 litre and worked better. My 3.2's didn't have very inspiring torque but went OK in kick-down or using the J-box as a semi-auto.
I remember driving my Godfather's 2.9 XJ40 when it was new. Very under powered! I've never heard it called a 'J Gate' before - at the time, the motoring press always referred to it as the 'Randle Handle' (named after Jaguar Director Jim Randle).
@@TheSgtbk - I read a lot of car magazines at the time it came out which is where I picked this up from. I suspect the J Gate was the official Jaguar name for it, rather than the journalists' nickname...
A beautifal looking Jag, parents neighbours had one of those many years ago, was he rich, a pub land lord, nope he was a bus driver for the local bus company, and I bet he got the looks in the company car park!
Had two XJ40s - 4.0 sovereign and the 3.2 Gold. Great cars but really have to be driven differently to a more modern technology advanced Jag. Adverse camber!!!!!!!! Scarey in an xj40. Later had an x350 and now an XF pre facelift.
I have been lucky enough to own two XJ40s, an early 3.6 but I really didn't like the part digital dash which used to periodically throw out spurious warnings and after that a late 6.0 V12 which was an excellent car but electronically very fragile, I only owned the car eighteen months and it failed to get me home on three occasions. That said when it on the days when everything was working it was and absolute joy. I replace that with a V8 Sovereign LWB which is the best Jag I've ever owned and still would if some clown hadn't driven a 35cwt van over the front of it. I currently own a 350 Sovereign which will be my last Jag i simply can't get on with the styling of the later cars.
I saw on UA-cam recently the old Top Gear, showing the 1986 Motor Show at the NEC, Birmingham. The presenters of the day, seeing the launch of the new XJ40 Jaguar Damilar, showed a Jaguar stand of the show like Furious Driving was driving on his video. Top Gear showed Sir John Egan, the chairman of Jaguar cars at the time, was interviewed on the show at the NEC!
I recently bought my first Jag, she's a 1989 XJ40 3.6 Sovereign, unfortunately somewhere along the line bits and pieces had been taken off, such as the toolkit. She needs some work but she drives beautifully. Ahhhh....
I loved mine, G437 SGD. Just the most wonderful cruiser, when I used to do a lot of miles. Sadly, she went to the great garage in the sky many years ago. Great review Matt, a very informed review of a car I always loved.
Sorry Matt I have to say it ? TWEED and JEANS 😱 in a Jaguar !!!! OMG very 1980s and was expecting Crocket & Tubbs to pop out of that huge boot at any moment 😂. What a beautiful car and yep I am definitely a wafter , not a woofer 😂 Woofters would definitely be banished to the boot for sure 😉.
Curious as to why you refer to the J Gate gearchange as "the infamous J Gate". I always thought it is a very clever piece of design and enjoy using it in my XJ40. I also remember many a road test item in magazines praising it as well and you seem to be the only person I have heard having a bad word to say about it.
Have a chance to buy one now for next to nothing. Still in great condition. Was kept in a storage unit. Light blue in color though, with a grayish interior. What should I be on the lookout for regarding issues?
This one is in very nice shape! Mine is a 1991 Sovereign and had quite a few more options. Seems like the name Sovereign wasn't exactly the same trim level in every market.
Like what? I think Daimlers were fully loaded in every market, although not always called Daimler (which makes more sense to me, Daimler should be a trim level and not the full name of the car).
@@E34Benzin My Canadian 1991 Jaguar Sovereign XJ40 has picnic tables, nicer seats front and back, the more hand-made door cards, wood in the area of the 2 dome lights, the height of the wood on the glove box is higher, there is a storage under the vents for the rear seats, on the transmission tunnel, heated seats. Probably other things too, but these were the ones that I spotted.
@@alexandrecouture2462 Is it also a 4 seater? The front grill and the chrome trim on the trunk lid have indentations? Your trim level would be called a Daimler in Europe, even the engine cover says Daimler instead of Jaguar (which I dislike since it's a Jaguar AJ6 engine), there are no Jaguar logos on Daimlers (sadly). In the US they were called Vanden Plas.
@@E34Benzin That's possible. To my knowledge we didn't have the Daimler brand in Canada, so possibly our Sovereign = Europe Daimler. Yes, mine is a 4 seater. But it does have the Jaguar grill and boot trunk lid, and not the Daimler one with indentations. No Daimler logo anywhere, only Jaguar logo.
My father's business partner in the early 90s, in rural Victoria Australia of all places, had a dark blue Daimler double six... They were in the leather business, but he also owned a pub. Trying to decide who had the coolest car in town, Mr. Burgess in the Daimler, or my Dad's atlas grey HSV SV5000. Important considerations as a 7 year old.
I look at an XJ and Arfer Daley comes to mind, can imagine many a buyer having to live that down. I think that sales dropped after 'Minder' first aired but Capri sales went up. The 40 still reminds me.
Anyone who knows or has owned these in any number will also know the AJ16 straight six 3.6 and 4.0 engined models were virtually bulletproof, particularly the 3.6's ...... forget your V8's, these were capable of truly huge mileages if looked after properly, as were the ridiculously reliable auto gearboxes, I sold so many I forget the numbers, but never had a single engine or gearbox failure, great cars and for me the 1986 to 1997 were the least problamatic, although rust and early digital dash model problems did occur as they got older, the analogue dash introduced in 1989 /90 sorted that problem though.
This car didn't have a tweedy old money image when new. It was favoured by the nouveau riche. When at boarding school late 80s I was getting a lift back to school with a friend. His father turned up in a new Soverign - wearing a shell suit. That was the image.
This to me is TRUE luxury - cream leather, acres of wood and Waft Factor 10. Not harsh generic all black and chrome with touchscreens everywhere. my uncle had two of these and then an X308 XJ Sport after those. All beautiful and just the comfiest cars I’ve ever travelled in. That 6 cylinder sounds wonderful too - the perfect combination of waft in silence and sports car growl if required. Who needs exhaust valves? Brilliant review of a fabulous car.
Grandmama had this car until she upgraded to a 2003 Jaguar X Type in 2003. She always had a hat on the back window and classic FM on as if she was the lady of the house speaking.
i have my 1990 xj40 daimler 4.0 since 2009, excellent car, has never left me stranded despite many saying they have had problems. I found it so comfortable that I can't drive anything anymore... hahah
Jaguar is one of my favourite British marques. These were quite common in North America back in the day. What did these cars in wasn't the build quality or design, it was those darned electronics!
Best looking sedan ever! And of course it looks better with the rectangular headlamps. The XJ40 was clearly not designed for the round ones, they look like an afterthought.
The XJ40 really the series 4 Jaguar was launched in late 1986, but the 5.3 XJ12 and Daimler Double Six continued in the shape of the series 3 with more curves because the engine wouldn't fit under the bonnet.
Good you dressed for reviewing this Jaguar a bery nice car and has got a lot of go takes of like scalded rabbit and of course plenty of wood and leather
These veteran car-youtubers are great, I just wish they could do the talking while filming the car instead of whilst driving so we can see the car while he talks about it. Now we only see the traffic with boring modern cars while he is talking about the Jaguar. I understand that a test drive is a part of the program, maybe even essential, but watching the car is to me more interesting than watching modern traffic. Therefore I wish that these youtubers could do the main part of the talk while filming the vehicle rather than while driving it.
In terms of styling alone, this has always seemed to me like an interim stopgap between the classic Jag XJ and the 300/308, both of which I much prefer to this. [After the last variation on that theme in the late aughts and with intoduction of the X351 in 2010, Jaguar completely lost me and I've neve wanted to own one of the sedans since. While I'm more of a high trim BMW prospect (M550i) - I would never be tempted by a modern Jag - or is it Tata?)]. As a second or third car simply for enjoyment, I'd still go either earlier or later than the XJ40. n.b. Here in the US, most models got this blocky and undistinguished headlamp workout except the pre-1990 models.
Love everything about it, nut I never liked the odd flat panels with buttons on either side of the steering wheel. The plastically cheap looking plinths just jar on me.
Since you mention the five-speed manual transmission option, I suspect you would thourougly enjoy driving an XJR6 X306 with the manual transmission. They are pretty special.
@@furiousdriving I’m pretty sure it could be arranged. I know of a few good driving examples down south and furthermore the one sitting in my garage up north. ;)
Had a 1990 Daimler XJ40 - 5 meters of understated pose & presences. "The seas would part" when driving it, trucks, cars would get out or give you rite of way. Long, sleek, floated along, just style & class. Without a doubt the XJ shape is globally instantly recognizable at any distance, its a jag even if you nothing about cars people just know.
Had it for 4yrs, never missed a beat or let me down in that whole time. Only reason let it go was its size, was like keeping a Great Dane in an apartment.
A lot of Jaguar enthusiasts seem to dislike the taller body of the all-new aluminium X350 and to *really* dislike the radical Callum styling of the X351. For them, the XJ should be more like this XJ40 or like the X300 or like the X308! "Very long, very low, very sleek" indeed as Matt says.
Fabulous cars. Had our 4.0L for 15 years. Got an X350 as our daily.😀
Yeah, and those enthusiasts wouldn't put their hands in their pockets for a new Jaguar anyway so their opinion is worth as much as the contents of their damp handkerchiefs.
Exactly, the X350 isn't a proper Jaguar anymore. It loses the proportions.
@@E34Benzin What is a 'proper Jaguar' then?
@@E34Benzinwrong,x350 is the last proper jag.i have 2 series 3s,3 xj40s,1x300,2308s,1 xf and 2 x350s,still have tge 2nd one,a super v8 and believe me when i say they are the best jaguars ever made.beautifully made with superb materials and build and just the right amount of technology.personally excepting the 308 its alkso the best looking jag made.everything since,nah.
It's amazing to see a XJ40 (or Daimler) in showroom condition like this! A not inconsiderable number of them seem to be more than a little worse for wear for their years. To see one that looks like brand new inside and out is quite the revelation! 😊
2nd and 3rd owners were often broke wannabe gangstas trying to look hard but couldn't afford to fix them when they broke every 10 min
Mine is nearly as clean as this one 😁
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
This “unreliable” label is just not true. This is proven by the fact that many cars were totally abused and still made it to 150,000 miles +
@@newblackdog7827 Even so, 2nd and 3rd owners tended go be absolute bell end wannabe cockney gangstas
@@bobbyrayofthefamilysmith24
OK, so I’m a “wannabe Cockney gangster” (I’ve owned 5 XJ40’s), but at least I’m not a backwards baseball cap 🧢 wearing 🔔 end, who’s never heard of indicators, who drives Mercedes / BMW / Audi! 🤷🏻♂️🤣
My grandparents were serial Mercedes-Benz buyers.
They went on a short trip with friends who had purchased a new Jaguar.
My grandfather was very impressed and took one on a test drive when it was time to trade.
He purchased it and within the first year and 20,000 miles it had significant issues. Mostly electrical issues but also a complete failure of the HVAC system in Tempe Arizona when the temperature was 110° F. He was driving home one day after playing golf in the car lost all power and had to be towed.
The problem was an intake valve had been installed on the exhaust side and had burnt up and broken.
By the time it happened, the car was 7,000 out of warranty.
Jaguar refused responsibility so my Grandfather paid to have it repaired drove it to the Mercedes-Benz dealer traded it and never entertained the thought of buying a Jaguar again!
At least he learned his lesson.
@taunuslunatic404 He certainly did and whenever he saw one on the road or walked past a parked one he always had a look on his face like he had just smelled something disagreeable!
@@williamegler8771 That's why you can't buy a car just because you like it.
You have to know it inside out.
British cars are total shite
He sounds like a no-no sense fellow.
Great video! I am the proud owner of a 1987 (early spec) 3,6 XJ 40 in glorious sage green metallic. A real headturner and a big powerful beast...goes like a bomb and just *glides* over our rotten, potholy roads. Love the Jaaaag!!!❤
As a former X300 owner, I can add that the right-and-left burlwood door panels are cut from the same piece of wood. The grain in fact matches on the doors. Cool fun fact.
It's 'burr' Walnut. Not 'burl'. Burr is a disease of the Walnut tree, causing those wonderful swirling effects in the wood.
@@thenewviceroy The term is indeed burl. Don't teach me what you don't know, unless you want to appear as a proactive ignoramus.
Americans say 'burl', because they are ignorant. English speaking peoples use the correct term - burr walnut. Unless you are going to also say 'aluminum' and 'sodder' instead of solder, if I were you, I'd be the one limiting my proactive ignorance.
That model is often maligned for it's squared off design, but it looks surprisingly elegant in the shade of dark metallic green. Love the drone footage Matt!
A truly fabulous creation. The cabin is almost a space of spiritual refuge. Contrast this with many new cars; I sat in a friend's Tesla recently and found myself losing the will to live.
I'm told that motor repairers like to drive them to Filey too.
I work with computers, and the last place I want to be when I drive home, is inside a computer.
The minimalist interior of the Tesla matches the minimalist industrial-styled apartment of the Tesla owner: concrete walls, rectangular white sofa, monochrome floor coverings etc. I imagine the typical Jaguar owner has ornate rugs on the floor, walnut bookcases, a chaise longue, Queen Anne chairs, oil paintings etc! Some of which may or may not be "borrowed". (Sorry I don't know much about interior design terminology.) Personally I can't think of anything worse than living in a minimalist industrial-styled apartment, but it takes all sorts. 🙂
@@ChishanFipz
Exaccccctly !!!!!!
Love the XJ40 range and actually preferred the big ( fish tank ) headlights rather than the quad set up on lower spec and Sport models. This is a proper Jaguar , end of. I don’t know what Sir William Lyon’s would have thought of all these diesel/ SUVs/ electric stuff which has materialised over the last few years , such a far cry from their intended heritage.
He would have looked at what would sell. If it was going to make money for the company he'd tell his staff to crack on. Lyons was a very unsentimental businessman. He was always looking ahead, not burying the company in the past. Something which tends to be completely lost on too many Jaguar fans crying about the likes of the X351 or the I-PACE and blithering on about 'heritage'.
@@mrdainaseheritage is very important and todays jags have lost all that so have unfortunatley lost me.i have my x350 and thats as new as i will be going.i did have a xf for a few years.very nice car but not got the specialness of the older jags.
@@ivanfernyhough3851 No, you're simply stuck in the past and can't move on. If Lyons' had been as sentimental the business would never have left Bloomfield Road.
I don't believe Mr Lyons would have approved of those new inventions at all, a Jaguar has to purr not whine or clacker.
@@V8_screw_electric_cars Again, you're another putting your own bias with no foundation. Lyons always looked ahead and saw the value of innovation. When he ran the company it brought out a twin-cam engine, developed disc brake technology and brought in monocoque construction. It launched cars that didn't hark back 50 years to a long-obsolete model. The E-Type was a spaceship in '61, not a re-hash of the XK120. The great shame about Jaguar is how no-one took it over who continued his ideals. If that had happened the XJ40 would have pursued a completely different path and the company would not have become little more than a tribute act of its Sixties models.
Good times. I had three XJ-40's at one point. All were the TWR version, badged as XJR. This got you special Speedline alloys, a bodykit, an uprated ECU for the engine and the gearbox + suspension mods including bilstein dampers. I have not seen one for many a year so I have to content myself with a TWR kitted Rx-7 as consolation.
This shows what a properly maintained XJ40 can be like, whilst most were killed off by penny pinching owners when they reached 10 years old and were available for £1000.
An absolutely gorgeous car and having owned 2 and some earlier & later XJ's the 40 has always been my favourite.
A good one rides like no other car and even an average one is a pleasure to drive.
Auto is the only choice to me though, changing gear just takes the edge off the utter waft experience of owning and driving a Jag.
Yes there's a place for manuals in lesser cars but I'm sorry its not in anything that came from Browns Lane.
I had a Daimler 4.0 XJ40, one of the last off the line in 1994 and had been owned by a Jaguar Executive no less. Picked it up for £3500, not bad for a car that had been serviced at Browns Lane for the first 5 years of its life. The last 2 years of the XJ40 were the best, thanks to the Ford money they were built like tanks. I now have a X358, one of the last built of those. I love the X358, but although a better car than the XJ40 I don't think it's a better Jaguar.
That kickdown noise (and the indicator noise!) brought back memories of my late Father's 3.6 Sovereign. It was a truly lovely car and basically as per this test one except no cd changer (E-reg, perhaps not offered then?). Oh, it had the slightly odd digital dahs as well, that was always criticised, but we had no problems with it. Sadly the car rusted badly, but it did live to a very high mileage and did top out on a few occasions on the autobahns! I really should look out for one of these again - they have a great appeal. Thanks for the great video!
I love this car. They are beautiful. I remember when they were new. The Volvo dealer also sold Jaguar. These earlier cars were all 6 cylinder because the engineers deliberately designed an engine bay that could not hold any V engine. They were dead set that the Rover V8 would not find its way under the bonnet. Here in Canada, we did not see the Daimler. What was a Daimler in England was sold as the Vanden Plas.
That wood inlay is parquetry, not marquetry. Marquetry is pictures made in pieces of wood.
The 'won't fit a V8' story is a myth. The Rover V8 would fit(ish), but they were never actually asked to try, as stated by several people in Jaguar. You can thank Bob Knight and his expert politicking within BL while he was in charge for that.
My dad had one of these, a (used) company car in about 1994 following a Bristol 409. He had it for about five years, and it taught him new things, such as the concept of ‘Limp mode’. Was subsequently replaced by an 80 series Land Cruiser, which he still has 24 years later
When I was a contractor working for Lucas in Birmingham back in the early 90s I remember seeing rows of those instrument clusters on test in environmental test chambers. I also saw a pre-production V12 one in the workshop on one visit.
Had an XJ81 (XJ40 6litre V12) for 14 years bought at 18 months old at half the new price. A few problems over the years but with the lower suspension of that model along with the lattice allows and four headlights it was much admired. Sold it to someone who was intending to do it up but after standing on his driveway deteriorating for a year it disappeared, presumably scrapped or sold for parts.
Finally you test drive my favourite make of car. I have been passionate about them since my late father bought a Mark 2 in 1966. I have owned four Jags since more than any other marque and the first one was a gunmetal grey Mark 2 3.8litre.
Many years ago I had a 1988 one (with the gas fluorsacent display which never quite worked) and the Citroen style self levelling rear suspension . Lovely wafty thing with a surprising acceperation (and thirst).
Always loved these, and I like the square headlamps too. Makes the front end look less cluttered and more elegant. Beautiful car.
I had one of these with the LED gauges. It was my first Jag, and cost me £600. Superb motor!
This year I had a 308 sport. It was a dream to have, no problems and my family knew it was my dream car.
Went back to my other dream car, my freelander 1 , life is good.
Typically on a long drive, the mpg is almost similar 🤷
Great stuff Matt 👍
My brother bought an 94 xj gold after a few quenchers on ebay on a bank holiday, he'd lend it to me when my car was in the garage, lovely to drive, 11 mpg and questionably electrics. Sometimes the radio and heater fan wouldn't work until you touched the headlight switch
This is actually my favourite Jaguar saloon design. Even without the fluted front-end, I think the front and the rear work so well together. The driving position is also very cosseting and sporty. Having owned a Mk1 Rover 827 Sterling and an 827 SLi Coupe, I know all too well the good things about them, and I chose my 800 Coupe over one of these. Back in the day, the Mk1 827 won a shootout with the 2.9 XJ6. And the 827 Coupe was favourably reviewed by Bentley owners. Even Clarkson's first review of the Coupe was very favourable, although later he changed his mind. The MK1 800s and these both suffered badly from rust, and that's very much the main thing to look out for. It's very hard to find an example that isn't or wasn't a rust bucket, although good clean ones do come up from time to time. Of course, these are still relatively plentiful, as opposed to Mk1 and even Mk2 Rover 800s. If I didn't live in London, I'd probably have a late XJ40 (or an X300, even though I actually prefer the XJ40's styling) as my main car, assuming I didn't do many miles.
AHHHH!!!! You profile my own car (well, the model)!! I've loved this car since before it was introduced and the spy photos of weather testing disguised prototypes in Arizona and Northern Ontario. Not a daily driver even in the US, but a lovely long-distance cruiser. Unloved by most who remember the Series III, but this car took Jaguar forward. It was modern looking and forward thinking. Unfortunately the long gestation period shortened its shelf life somewhat. Ford investment did improve the factory, production line, etc., but I remember seeing the X300 in January 1995 in Toronto, and thought, I don't like that facelift. Lowering and widening the grille of a wide car made the X300 look too wide. And Dearborn's meddling / directive's in Jaguar styling never produced anything exciting, design wise. It's as if the money men's concept of Britain was based on the original 1960s Avengers, and the X300 styling attempt to harken back to the stunning Series III was not successful. When the XJs finally got the investment of an all new replacement car, the 2004 X350 did look attractive with styling that is much better balanced. And despite being excellent, it was too outdated. Of course Ford jetisoned Jaguar right before it hit the ground running with exceptionally modern and contemporary styling when Ian Callum's XF was released, burying the interesting but excessively retro S-Type, and in my opinion, I like the greater freedom of design that TATA's ownership of the company has yielded. And, hah, I absolutely cringe when people call it a "Jag" or "Jag-wire". I do call it by the American pronunciation "JAG-Wahr" for three reasons. That is the pronunciation used in USA marketing at the time. Using a British pronunciation makes me sound affected and pretentious. And as is often pointed out, the animal it is named after is native to the Americas. Yeah, the company pronounces "Jag-U-Ar", including contemporary marketing, but I'll only change if I get a more recent one to keep mine company. Love this car!!!!
Grace, Space, Pace:
Lovely to see and great that people are keeping these cars alive.
For me this generation is not my favorite, the curves of the XJ were rather out of style at that time and so the more squarer style does not stand up that well.
I think I would rather go for the later x350 alloy versions which are criminally cheap to buy (even good ones). I keep looking at them but what puts me off is on a couple of occasions I have shown interest in one the owner grabs me and asks if I want to buy it!
I must say the looks of the XJ40 have grown on me over the years - I thought it was a bit too square when it came out in the mid-1980s but I prefer it to the cars that replaced it, which to me were trying to recapture the Series 3, although that in itself wasn't such a bad thing.
Very nice. I had a 3.6 xj40, followed by an x300 xjr then my final Jag was an x350 tdv6. The xj40 was the most sublimely comfortable car. The x300 xjr was an absolute blast,so much fun. The x350 was great on fuel. I spent a lot of time out in Germany and was able to unleash them on the autobhan. My favourite was the xj40,just, over the x300 xjr. The x350 was a good car but:1,I should have bought the v8 and,2, it just lacked something of the earlier models, even the air suspension was not able to provide the comfort of the xj40. I miss the first two, but not the x350! Models after the x350 have just not appealed to ne.
Back in period, I did borrow one of these from our local dealer to demonstrate to a client customer whilst working for a leasing company. Sadly it was a 2.9 L version, which did feel a bit flat and I recall it was manual with cloth trim so not the best combination. The customer however, was still blown away but in fairness he was driving a Montego Vanden Plas!
ha, after a Maestro and spec of these would be impressive!
I bought one of these in 1990. Metallic blue with barley interior. Beautiful. Turned out to be the worst car I've ever owned. Electrical problems galore & when the crankshaft came loose that was the final straw. The Lexus LS400 came out at the same time for less $! Boy did I make a mistake not buying that but in 1992 I rectified that & bought the Lexus I should have 2 years earlier & never looked back. Lexus is the best...period!
Fortunately, these days, the good ones that are left are often in the hands of enthusiasts that know how to prevent the problems you experienced. Corrosion is often due to blocked drainage points, and electrical problems are usually caused by defective dry solder joints in the respective modules.
That said, the enthusiast owned cars now would be subject to a much easier life than the daily drivers in the past.
Love me some XJ40, I am celebrating my 25th year owning my USA market 1994 XJ81 V12. Its not going anywhere, and its starting to get some honks and thumbs up from passers by now that it didn't get 10 years ago. I think they are finally entering "classic" territory, or at least there are so few nice ones left that people just don't see them and therefore they think they are special now.
Currently looking at one of these to become my next daily, so this is a perfectly timed video!
THANK YOU so much for such a dignified and positive review of this car. Too many critical and negative videos out there on this model. I have a '92 VDP "Majestic" here in the US (or Daimler in the UK) - it's great!
It's true that jaguar didn't want the rover V8. My BIL was on the design team. He also worked on the V12 conversion where his job was reversing the AC system to make room in the engine bay
Thats great to hear that story is true, it sounds like pub story!
@@furiousdriving Jaguar had a long-standing antipathy to V8 engines through Bill Heynes and Bob Knight amongst others. It was a shame in a way as it spelt the death knell for the Turner designed V8 engines when they bought Daimler. While the 2.5 did find its way into the Mk2, the larger 4.0 died away, which was a lost opportunity. As for the V8 story, the matter simply wasn't pushed by BL, but the engine bay could take a V8 block as numerous US conversions have proved.
Preferred the styling of the 3.2 (had two of them - not at the same time) but wanted the 4.0 engine; apparently it was designed as a 4 litre and worked better. My 3.2's didn't have very inspiring torque but went OK in kick-down or using the J-box as a semi-auto.
A very fine car - only on today's diabolical roads do you realise just how good they are. A proper Jaguar.
The XJ40 is such a dangerous car to buy, as they drive so well that even a horrendously knackered one will convince you to part with your cash.
I remember driving my Godfather's 2.9 XJ40 when it was new. Very under powered!
I've never heard it called a 'J Gate' before - at the time, the motoring press always referred to it as the 'Randle Handle' (named after Jaguar Director Jim Randle).
Never heard it called anything other than "J Gate"
@@TheSgtbk - I read a lot of car magazines at the time it came out which is where I picked this up from. I suspect the J Gate was the official Jaguar name for it, rather than the journalists' nickname...
I've owned lots. The XJ40 is by far my favourite Jaguar.
A beautifal looking Jag, parents neighbours had one of those many years ago, was he rich, a pub land lord, nope he was a bus driver for the local bus company, and I bet he got the looks in the company car park!
well paid bus driver or very cheap Jag...?
Had two XJ40s - 4.0 sovereign and the 3.2 Gold.
Great cars but really have to be driven differently to a more modern technology advanced Jag.
Adverse camber!!!!!!!!
Scarey in an xj40.
Later had an x350 and now an XF pre facelift.
Yes, I understand the adverse camber topic with these!
First time I drove one of mine around Brands Hatch I discovered that!
Clarkson’s main contribution to car culture. Saying Jaaaaaaag. And he’s right. My dad worked for Jag and I love them.
I bloody love jags. Such a great balance of comfort and sport
bloody hell
I have been lucky enough to own two XJ40s, an early 3.6 but I really didn't like the part digital dash which used to periodically throw out spurious warnings and after that a late 6.0 V12 which was an excellent car but electronically very fragile, I only owned the car eighteen months and it failed to get me home on three occasions. That said when it on the days when everything was working it was and absolute joy. I replace that with a V8 Sovereign LWB which is the best Jag I've ever owned and still would if some clown hadn't driven a 35cwt van over the front of it. I currently own a 350 Sovereign which will be my last Jag i simply can't get on with the styling of the later cars.
I saw on UA-cam recently the old Top Gear, showing the 1986 Motor Show at the NEC, Birmingham.
The presenters of the day, seeing the launch of the new XJ40 Jaguar Damilar, showed a Jaguar stand of the show like Furious Driving was driving on his video. Top Gear showed Sir John Egan, the chairman of Jaguar cars at the time, was interviewed on the show at the NEC!
I recently bought my first Jag, she's a 1989 XJ40 3.6 Sovereign, unfortunately somewhere along the line bits and pieces had been taken off, such as the toolkit. She needs some work but she drives beautifully. Ahhhh....
I loved mine, G437 SGD. Just the most wonderful cruiser, when I used to do a lot of miles. Sadly, she went to the great garage in the sky many years ago. Great review Matt, a very informed review of a car I always loved.
The XJ40 series were the most beautiful Jaguars ever!
Sorry Matt I have to say it ? TWEED and JEANS 😱 in a Jaguar !!!! OMG very 1980s and was expecting Crocket & Tubbs to pop out of that huge boot at any moment 😂. What a beautiful car and yep I am definitely a wafter , not a woofer 😂 Woofters would definitely be banished to the boot for sure 😉.
Matt doing his best Joseph Lloyd cosplay! :)
😂🤣
Curious as to why you refer to the J Gate gearchange as "the infamous J Gate". I always thought it is a very clever piece of design and enjoy using it in my XJ40. I also remember many a road test item in magazines praising it as well and you seem to be the only person I have heard having a bad word to say about it.
He has a thing about big cars with manual boxes he hates autos!
I’d only ever buy an XJ40 in 4.0 Sovereign guise or XJ12, I’ve had 3 4.0 sov’s and they were all fabulous, incredible cars.
That is one of the best looking cars every to be made in my opinion, amazing.
Agreed, it's a handsome beast, that's for sure.
Have a chance to buy one now for next to nothing. Still in great condition. Was kept in a storage unit. Light blue in color though, with a grayish interior. What should I be on the lookout for regarding issues?
My uncle had one of these and I got to drive it once. A bit cramped inside but what a car to drive, a proper wafter 😃👍
So smooth and comfy
This one is in very nice shape! Mine is a 1991 Sovereign and had quite a few more options. Seems like the name Sovereign wasn't exactly the same trim level in every market.
Like what? I think Daimlers were fully loaded in every market, although not always called Daimler (which makes more sense to me, Daimler should be a trim level and not the full name of the car).
@@E34Benzin My Canadian 1991 Jaguar Sovereign XJ40 has picnic tables, nicer seats front and back, the more hand-made door cards, wood in the area of the 2 dome lights, the height of the wood on the glove box is higher, there is a storage under the vents for the rear seats, on the transmission tunnel, heated seats. Probably other things too, but these were the ones that I spotted.
@@alexandrecouture2462 Is it also a 4 seater? The front grill and the chrome trim on the trunk lid have indentations?
Your trim level would be called a Daimler in Europe, even the engine cover says Daimler instead of Jaguar (which I dislike since it's a Jaguar AJ6 engine), there are no Jaguar logos on Daimlers (sadly).
In the US they were called Vanden Plas.
@@E34Benzin That's possible. To my knowledge we didn't have the Daimler brand in Canada, so possibly our Sovereign = Europe Daimler. Yes, mine is a 4 seater. But it does have the Jaguar grill and boot trunk lid, and not the Daimler one with indentations. No Daimler logo anywhere, only Jaguar logo.
@@alexandrecouture2462
Must be a fake. Real ones has British Leyland logos with spitfires and union jack's flying in 8 carrot gold
My father's business partner in the early 90s, in rural Victoria Australia of all places, had a dark blue Daimler double six... They were in the leather business, but he also owned a pub.
Trying to decide who had the coolest car in town, Mr. Burgess in the Daimler, or my Dad's atlas grey HSV SV5000. Important considerations as a 7 year old.
yes, these things matter!
@C.Fecteau-AU-MJ13. I know which one would be worth more now...but a 7 y.o me would go the Jag everyday. Cheers!
I look at an XJ and Arfer Daley comes to mind, can imagine many a buyer having to live that down. I think that sales dropped after 'Minder' first aired but Capri sales went up. The 40 still reminds me.
Having driven 3, I know they're pretty decent JAAAAGS. I still can't forgive the square front lights though...
The 2.9 with cloth interior was also rather nice
I'm not a Jaguar enthusiast but could be one after this road test! Great review of an obviously great car!
I had one of these and loved it, it was better than the X300 I replaced it with.
I get it. It's a more bonafide car, not a rehash and the seats were more luxurious.
Anyone who knows or has owned these in any number will also know the AJ16 straight six 3.6 and 4.0 engined models were virtually bulletproof, particularly the 3.6's ...... forget your V8's, these were capable of truly huge mileages if looked after properly, as were the ridiculously reliable auto gearboxes, I sold so many I forget the numbers, but never had a single engine or gearbox failure, great cars and for me the 1986 to 1997 were the least problamatic, although rust and early digital dash model problems did occur as they got older, the analogue dash introduced in 1989 /90 sorted that problem though.
Currently, the highest mileage one we know of has just passed 700,000 km!
This car didn't have a tweedy old money image when new. It was favoured by the nouveau riche. When at boarding school late 80s I was getting a lift back to school with a friend. His father turned up in a new Soverign - wearing a shell suit. That was the image.
This to me is TRUE luxury - cream leather, acres of wood and Waft Factor 10. Not harsh generic all black and chrome with touchscreens everywhere. my uncle had two of these and then an X308 XJ Sport after those. All beautiful and just the comfiest cars I’ve ever travelled in. That 6 cylinder sounds wonderful too - the perfect combination of waft in silence and sports car growl if required. Who needs exhaust valves? Brilliant review of a fabulous car.
Such a beautiful car. I think I prefer the double round headlights though.
For me THIS is the best Jaguar out there.
I love the looks and it's interior.
For me this is the typical oldschool English luxury
Love it! Same colour as my 1994 XJ40 Sovereign. Great review 👍
Grandmama had this car until she upgraded to a 2003 Jaguar X Type in 2003. She always had a hat on the back window and classic FM on as if she was the lady of the house speaking.
One of the most elegant and best looking Jaguar of all time.
Love it so much! Hello from Finland!
Hello there!
Ive got a low mileage x300 currently but i do fancy adding an xj40
The quads never looked right on the xj40. The long maligned squares have aged BEAUTIFULLY.
Just one thing, Jaguar never did "plastic" wood. They had a special wood shop at Browns Lane and did it all inhouse originally.
Like Kia
i have my 1990 xj40 daimler 4.0 since 2009, excellent car, has never left me stranded despite many saying they have had problems. I found it so comfortable that I can't drive anything anymore... hahah
Jaguar is one of my favourite British marques. These were quite common in North America back in the day. What did these cars in wasn't the build quality or design, it was those darned electronics!
Best looking sedan ever!
And of course it looks better with the rectangular headlamps. The XJ40 was clearly not designed for the round ones, they look like an afterthought.
The XJ40 really the series 4 Jaguar was launched in late 1986, but the 5.3 XJ12 and Daimler Double Six continued in the shape of the series 3 with more curves because the engine wouldn't fit under the bonnet.
One peculiarity I found was that (with my 3.2's) you'd get the same mpg (not great!!) at 90mph as you did at 60mph - never quite understood that...
I was hitting 35mpg out of my 3.6 and 4.0 automatics.
@@paulie-Gualtieri. That's amazing Paul! I only ever used the trip computer to test but was getting 19 or 20mpg if I was lucky!
@jamesportrais3946
Yeah, they were far more economical than the P38 Range Rover 2.5 DSE I had, that was doing 20mpg on a run.
The hotel owner next door to me had one back in the day. His also had those indicator repeaters set into the front bumper.
What a coincidence! Samme day in Sweden there is a Jaguar/Daimler version with only 39,000 km for sale, very tempting.
To my eye, this is the best looking Jag ever.
it is a lovely shape
You make a sound point.
The Whitesnake cassette might be a fun reference to the fact that Whitesnake featured Jaguars in some of their videoclips in the 80s and 90s...
I think it is!
Exactly that.
just keep em coming matt they good and so is your channel ......
nice car matt, a proper gents cruiser, it would suit you!
Our pub landlord drove a Mk VI Bentley and wore plus fours. He was indistinguishable from the landed gentry.
that sounds a good pub. Our local had an X300 outside for years till a new guy took over
Good you dressed for reviewing this Jaguar a bery nice car and has got a lot of go takes of like scalded rabbit and of course plenty of wood and leather
Just about to share this with the chairman of our JEC region. Believe it or not he was a pub landlord
hope he likes it!
i never saw a round headlight one in aus
These veteran car-youtubers are great, I just wish they could do the talking while filming the car instead of whilst driving so we can see the car while he talks about it. Now we only see the traffic with boring modern cars while he is talking about the Jaguar. I understand that a test drive is a part of the program, maybe even essential, but watching the car is to me more interesting than watching modern traffic. Therefore I wish that these youtubers could do the main part of the talk while filming the vehicle rather than while driving it.
Shock horror, never sat my bum in one of those. Lovin your commentary. What a piece of machinery. They don't make them like that anymore.👍
Was this on the Ilse Of Wight cos i reconise the bus you were behind, green Vectis (Latin for Ilse of Wight)
no, southern england bit not IoW!
In terms of styling alone, this has always seemed to me like an interim stopgap between the classic Jag XJ and the 300/308, both of which I much prefer to this. [After the last variation on that theme in the late aughts and with intoduction of the X351 in 2010, Jaguar completely lost me and I've neve wanted to own one of the sedans since. While I'm more of a high trim BMW prospect (M550i) - I would never be tempted by a modern Jag - or is it Tata?)]. As a second or third car simply for enjoyment, I'd still go either earlier or later than the XJ40. n.b. Here in the US, most models got this blocky and undistinguished headlamp workout except the pre-1990 models.
Love everything about it, nut I never liked the odd flat panels with buttons on either side of the steering wheel. The plastically cheap looking plinths just jar on me.
Very appropriate hat for the review
The perfect vehicle for flat cap wearers, they go together like bread and butter
Since you mention the five-speed manual transmission option, I suspect you would thourougly enjoy driving an XJR6 X306 with the manual transmission. They are pretty special.
I think I would like that a lot
@@furiousdriving I’m pretty sure it could be arranged. I know of a few good driving examples down south and furthermore the one sitting in my garage up north. ;)
Another great review, what a stunning car! The car is in beautiful condition, love the colour combination. This car oozes Britain, love it.
Goodness gracious, I've waited for an XJ40 review for so long.
And Mr Furious delivers...