TJPark01
Been here awhile...
Visually it's a much more compelling package then any of the German or Japanese cars and I want to like Jaguars, but it's the same thing with Audi/VW. They're nice to look at but living with one everyday will drive you nuts.The price and sales experience could attract Avalon/Maxima/ES350/G37 buyers. WSJ was comparing it to a Lincoln and Buick.
However, the basic car is very comparable to the Jaguar. In other threads people here are considering the Infiniti M37. The Jaguar probably should be considered a direct, less reliable, more full featured alternative.
It's sh** like this that will keep most people away from Jaguars:
How To Tow A Jaguar Equipped With An Electronic Shift Lever
A Jaguar XFR recently suffered electrical failure while in my care, and its electronic shift lever became locked in Park. When the time came to tow it, the car had to be in neutral. Here's the trick to shifting it.
How To Tow A Jaguar Equipped With An Electronic Shift LeverThis is a Jaguar XFR. Like many modern cars, it sports an electronic shift lever — a digital control that offers no mechanical connection to the transmission. The control that Jaguar uses, dubbed JaguarDrive, is part of an electronic cockpit ballet that heralds the moment when the car's ignition is switched on: When you hit the start button, the shifter rises from the console, the climate vents rotate forward, and the center touchscreen comes alive.
This shift lever is found on every current production Jaguar. Many luxury manufacturers use a similar device, all of them designed to make the act of driving more emotionally involving and less like actual work.
This is fine, except when stuff breaks.