The power steering is precise without being too heavy and the new XJ goes where it's aimed. The wheels stay glued to the road surface thanks to the double-wishbone suspension and Jaguar's Computer Active Technology Suspension (CATS) that continuously and instantly adjusts damping. CATS works well with the air suspension and ensures stability whether the car is undergoing heavy acceleration, hard braking, or traversing an undulating road. During several hundred miles of driving on a variety of different roads and surfaces we found the car was stable and handled predictably at all times.
Even the base model, if it's fair to call it that, with its 294 horsepower V8 engine can accelerate from 0 to 60 mph in about 6.3 seconds, according to Jaguar. That's quite quick. The new XJ8 offers improved fuel economy as well. The V8 engine delivers good low-end torque so power is instantly available.
Shifting is seamless thanks to the six-speed automatic transmission. Jaguar's J-gate transmission allows you to flick the lever to the left and manually shift gears, if you wish. In reality, there's enough power and the electronic brain controlling the gearbox does such a good job that shifting manually seems superfluous.
The XJR adds a supercharger that forces air into the V8, producing 390 horsepower. This propels the XJR from 0 to 60 mph in 5 seconds, according to Jaguar, very quick indeed. This rocket ship also gets a stiffer suspension, bigger brakes and fat 19-inch tires that grip the road even better. Amazingly the ride is not too harsh despite the short sidewalls. These tires cause the steering to feel a little tighter.
But it is the whine of the supercharger as you press the gas pedal that sets the XJR apart from the rest of the pack. Previously the XJR has been penalized with the gas guzzler tax but no more. Its lighter weight means fuel consumption is all but identical to the old JX8.
Brakes on the new XJ models are powerful yet smooth and don't grab unless you really need them to. The XJ now gets the same electronic parking brake that first appeared in the 2003 S-Type. A small lever is pulled to set it and it's automatically deactivated when drive or reverse is engaged, an elegant setup. Next Page