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2011 Jaguar Xj L Supercharged on 2040-cars

Year:2011 Mileage:35500 Color: Black /
 Black
Location:

Southlake, Texas, United States

Southlake, Texas, United States
Engine:5.0L 5000CC V8 GAS DOHC Supercharged
Condition:
Used: A vehicle is considered used if it has been registered and issued a title. Used vehicles have had at least one previous owner. The condition of the exterior, interior and engine can vary depending on the vehicle's history. See the seller's listing for full details and description of any imperfections. ...
VIN (Vehicle Identification Number)
: sajwa2ge0bmv14884
Year: 2011
Drive Type: RWD
Make: Jaguar
Mileage: 35,500
Model: XJ
Exterior Color: Black
Trim: L Supercharged Sedan 4-Door
Interior Color: Black

This is a fantastic car! I am the second owner and have owned it for about a year. I love everything about this car. It is in immaculate condition, all service was performed at the dealership. Read the article below to become more familiar with the car and all of its features. You wont be disappointed! Call or Text Steve if you have any questions or want to come and look at it. (801) 822-8287 


You just don't see it coming. The 2011 Jaguar XJ L Supercharged is sleek, it's sexy and it's sophisticated. It has a cabin that's adorned for an English king and big enough for a Sacramento King. Then you turn the clever rotary shifter to Drive, stomp on the gas and wonder how you suddenly managed to find yourself at the leading edge of a thundering avalanche. The otherwise silent cabin fills with a burbling, seductive roar as the supercharged V8 sends the new XJ from zero to 60 mph in just 4.5 seconds. You just don't see it coming, and neither will drivers of theBMW M5, who'll be left behind at traffic lights still admiring the shapely tail end that just jumped to warp speed.

Therein is the beauty of the XJ L Supercharged. It is a car that at once represents a stunning new direction for the stuffiest nameplate in the luxury class, and also a potential shake-up for a market segment dominated for years by Germany. It takes a special car for a shopper to consider something other than a BMW 7 Series or Mercedes-Benz S-Class, yet the XJ should do just that, thanks to class-leading style and performance, not to mention a massive list of standard features and a price that undercuts its Teutonic competitors by thousands.

Performance

The staggering acceleration of the 2011 Jaguar XJ L Supercharged is not simply the result of its having a supercharged 5.0-liter V8, which in this trim level produces 470 horsepower and 424 pound-feet of torque. Sure, more power than all its similarly priced rivals is a big part of it, but the Jag's aluminum structure also helps keep its weight to just 4,341 pounds with a full tank of gasoline. It doesn't take a degree from MIT to recognize that more power plus less weight equals one quick kitten. Indeed, not only does the XJ L Supercharged blow a 750i and S550 out of the water from zero to 60, it matches Jag's top-dog super sport sedan, the Jaguar XFR.

Less weight also pays dividends when negotiating a tight, winding road. The comfort-biased tuning of the XJ's adaptive suspension means this car can't quite match the poise of German super sedans, but there is a nimble feel to the XJ that makes you forget there's about 10 feet of long-wheelbase English limousine still behind you.

The same can be said about the BMW 750Li (well, except the English part), but the German super sedan feels like it overcomes its size with electronic wizardry like active rear wheel steering, while the Jag seems to have an inherent, natural agility. Of course the XJ still has wizardry like a Dynamic Mode that subtly alters the calibration of the suspension, transmission, electronic differential and stability control. Meanwhile the XJ steers with a low-effort, friction-free feel, yet there is also a level of communication that is far more rewarding than the electric-assist steering of BMW's flagship.

It would appear as if the hierarchy of luxury flagships is in flux. BMW used to be the driver's choice in the segment, but with the surprising XJ and the near sports-carlike Porsche Panamera, the choice for drivers just got a lot harder.

Comfort

A flagship luxury sedan like the 2011 Jaguar XJ is about so much more than its performance and handling. It is the day-long journey that this car seems to make disappear in mere moments, the tedious commute that it makes tolerable and the errands that you don't mind running because your Jaguar is just so darned comfortable.

It starts with a ride that strikes an appropriate balance between the luxury limousine it resembles and the sport sedan it drives like. With its large wheels, there is harshness over nastier bumps that you won't experience in the more accommodating Mercedes S-Class, but milder imperfections are sufficiently suppressed. The XJ is certainly better sorted than Jag's sometimes heavy-footed-feeling XF and there's also none of the wafting-on-a-cloud suppleness of Jaguars past.

Inside the cabin of the XJ L Supercharged, you will discover front seats that come standard with heating, cooling, massaging and 12 ways of adjustment (not counting the lumbar and side bolster adjustments). They are perhaps not as pleasingly contoured as the seats of an S-Class nor as supportive as the seats of a Panamera, but we doubt you'll mind much. The power tilt-and-telescoping steering wheel assures a driving position that favors average-to-tall drivers.

In most cars, backseat travelers are short-changed, but not in the 2011 Jaguar XJ. There's no massaging or adjustments as in other long-wheelbase luxury sedans, but passengers in back still get treated to standard heating and cooling, as well as their own controls for the climate system and sunshades. There are also vanity mirrors, drop-down tray tables (perfect for a laptop) and, most importantly, enough legroom for practically everyone.

Headroom is just barely sufficient for someone 6-foot-3, however, so rival sedans with less slinky roof lines will feel more accommodating (maybe we were a tad generous with that Sacramento Kings line, then).

Function

Aside from the abundance of leather and wood, the first thing you notice upon climbing into the low-slung cabin is the two dominant display screens. One is a touchscreen for the myriad infotainment and climate systems. It is thankfully quite large, and offers a smarter menu structure and crisper graphics than Jag's other models, but the system remains a bit convoluted and sluggish in its responses. For example, using the seat heating/cooling controls requires pushing a physical dash button, then locating the rather small icons, which may or may not respond to your first touch attempt.

Our test car also suffered from a CD player that essentially froze and refused to acknowledge the CD once it was in place. Only time seemed to correct this glitch, but it's hard to know if this was a problem with our specific car or that age-old English car proclivity for electrical gremlins.

The other screen is a virtual representation of the car's gauges. The lone downside is that the digitally represented tachometer cannot keep up with the engine, creating a pixelation effect. Otherwise, the screen resists glare and there is a versatility to the information presented that regular old gauges can't match. Navigation guidance (with a map) is displayed in the left binnacle, which also shows music information and the selected gear when using the six-speed automatic's paddle shifters. When Dynamic mode is engaged, these gauges take on a red hue, as if the car has been possessed by evil.

Just as the functionality of high-tech features suffer for the sake of the cabin's striking design, so, too, the XJ's more tangible attributes are affected by styling. Rearward visibility is limited by the tall rear end and sloping roof, though standard blind-spot warning and a rearview camera make it acceptable. The trunk opening is also wide enough to easily swallow a pair of golf clubs, but a few awkwardly shaped points in the trunk make other big luxury sedans more practical.

Design/Fit and Finish

Not only is the 2011 Jaguar XJ's cabin design unique and appealing from an aesthetic standpoint, its craftsmanship and materials quality are a step beyond its already impressive rivals.

Actually, if you're considering a Bentley, reconsider, as the XJ's cabin is easily just as nice and far less expensive. Soft leather (available in two tones) covers not only the seats, but most of the dash and doors. Your choice of four veneers wraps beautifully around the interior and behind the dash. Piano-black trim, ice-blue lighting and tastefully applied chrome further decorate this cabin fit for royalty, though that chrome can be blinding when the sun hits it just right.

That's what you get when you buy a car from a country where the sun seldom shines.

Who should consider this vehicle

The 2011 Jaguar XJ L Supercharged is a large luxury sedan for those who value unique style and an expressive driving character above cavernous space and functionality.

Compared to its German rivals, the Jaguar XJ delivers a bolder sense of style combined with a softer sense of luxury. These are traditional British virtues, and they have more appeal now than ever after decades of market domination by the German brands.

Jaguar XJ for Sale

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Auto blog

2014 Jaguar XKR-S GT takes fiercest feline further [UPDATE]

Tue, 26 Mar 2013

If there were any car to overshadow the 542-horsepower Jaguar XJR that's coming to the New York Auto Show, this is it. Meet the Jaguar XKR-S GT - a street-legal, higher-performance version of the already hardcore XKR-S that will be headed to North America in very limited quantities. Only 30 will be offered on our continent, with 25 earmarked for the United States and the remaining five going to Canada. The cost of entry? $174,000 when it goes on sale this August.
What that gets you is a coupe that is, without any doubt, ready to attack any racetrack it might encounter. The XKR-S' supercharged 5.0-liter V8 has not been upgraded in terms of power - not that 550 horsepower and 502 pound-feet of torque is anything to sneeze at - but instead, Jaguar focused on tuning the bits of the car that help effectively put all that grunt to the ground. There's a new hood with rows of louvers to aid in engine cooling, and elsewhere on the car's body, you'll find carbon fiber on the redesigned front air splitter, dive planes, extended wheel arch spats, as well as a new rear diffuser, an aluminum front under tray and an absolutely massive wing out back to keep downforce to a maximum.
Underneath that hot body are retuned and height-adjustable adaptive dampers; spring rates have been increased by 68 percent in front and 25 percent at the rear versus a standard XKR-S. Most of the front and rear suspension geometry has been upgraded, larger carbon ceramic brakes have been fitted at all four corners, and wider 20-inch forged alloy wheels are found here, wrapped in Pirelli Corsa tires - 255/35-series rubber in front and 305/30-series stuff out back. There's also a revised active exhaust system, which should only improve the already thunderous roar coming out the back of the Jag coupe, and a faster steering rack has been added for improved agility.

Jaguar XF gets performance-look R-Sport trim

Wed, 26 Feb 2014

If you're looking for all the style of a sports sedan but without the added expense of springing for a full-on performance model (and keeping it fed with fuel and fresh tires), most European automakers will gladly hook you up with an all-show, no-go package. BMW has its M-Sport aero kits, Audi its S-Line, and Mercedes its AMG Sport packs. And now Jaguar is getting in on the action with the launch of the new R-Sport line.
Set to be introduced on the XF at the Geneva Motor Show, the R-Sport trim at least some of the flash of the XFR or XFR-S but with a more economical engine and a relatively accessible price of entry. (This is, after all, still a Jag.) The XF R-Sport is distinguished by a sportier front bumper, side sills, rear spoiler, 17-inch wheels and unique badging to set it apart from any "ordinary" Jaguar XF. The interior is upgraded as well, and there's an optional black styling pack to take things even further.
Jaguar is offering the XF R-Sport in either sedan or wagon form with the 2.2-liter turbodiesel producing 161 horsepower and 295 pound-feet of torque, fitted with a spot-start system to make it a far more frugal option than the 5.0-liter supercharged V8 in the real deal. Although this version won't be coming to US as you see it here, Jaguar tells Autoblog it's always possible it'll produce a similar aesthetic treatment for the North American market - just don't count on such models arriving under diesel motivation. We'll take a closer look at them in Geneva next week, but for now, you can check out the gallery and press release below for an idea of what to expect.

Autoblog Podcast #396

Tue, 09 Sep 2014

Episode #396 of the Autoblog Podcast is here, and this week, Dan Roth, Steven Ewing, and Chris Paukert talk about the 2016 Mazda MX-5 Miata, the 2016 Jaguar XE, and the 2015 Lexus RC. We start with what's in the garage and finish up with some of your questions, and for those of you who hung with us live on our UStream channel, thanks for taking the time. Check out the rundown below with times for topics, and you can follow along down below with our Q&A. Thanks for listening!
Autoblog Podcast #396:
Topics: