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![2004 Jaguar XK-Series]()
2004 | Jaguar XK-Series XKR Laguna Niguel, California | Coupes | $39,988 | | 40,592 |  | 6.0 mi |

2008 | Jaguar XK-Series XKR Mission Viejo, California | Convertibles | $79,588 | Gray | 7,876 | Dealer | 0.0 mi |

2000 | Jaguar XK-Series XKR Lake Forest, California | Convertibles | $21,995 | Gold | 57,940 | Dealer | 3.3 mi |

2002 | Jaguar XK-Series XK8 Lake Forest, California | Convertibles | $23,995 | Sapphire Blue | 38,360 | Dealer | 3.3 mi |

2000 | Jaguar XK-Series XK8 Costa Mesa, California | Coupes | $16,995 | Black Sapphire | 71,677 | Dealer | 16.7 mi |
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Professional Review
The outgoing Jaguar sports car, the XK8, is 10 years old, and in its later years, had become a patchwork as new technologies like satellite radio, navigation and airbags had to be adapted to it. Its V8 horsepower number began with a 2 instead of a 3, putting it way behind the competition. There were new safety and emissions goals to be met. So they threw out the XK8 and replaced it with a brand new car from the ground up, the first aluminum-chassis sports car in Jaguar's six decades of production. They've changed the name, too, in the process, from XK-8 to XK 4.2. The all-new 2007 Jaguar XK 4.2 is the successor to every XK dating back to the first one in 1948 and, as such, it is Jaguar's franchise player. The XK's main competitors are the Mercedes-Benz SL, the BMW 650, and the Cadillac XLR. The new XK is a tasty combination of Jaguar style, traditional British luxury car touches like wood, leather, and quietness, with every system in and under the car updated and improved to meet that very serious competition. It's design, while very, very pretty, is derivative of all previous generations since the XK-E, with some Aston Martin and Ford design cues thrown in (Jaguar's Scottish chief designer Ian Callum designed both the Aston Martin DB-7 and DB-9 sports cars).
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