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| 2018 JAGUAR XE SV |
Building Project 8 is more than just bolting on a few choice go-faster goodies, however. SVO engineers say 75 percent of the muscular Jag sedan, from body to suspension to engine to interior, is unique. “This is the car to make our reputation,” says SVO boss John Edwards with a broad grin. Think of it as Jaguar Land Rover’s take on the legendary AMG Hammer.
Project 8 starts life as a Jaguar XE sedan aluminum body shell. Only the roof panel and the front door skins are left unchanged: A new bodyside stamping and new rear door skins incorporate 2.2-inch flares over 305/30 tires on 20-inch rims. Carbon-fiber front fenders feature 0.75-inch flares, and the headlights have been moved half an inch farther forward to ensure clearance in the wheel wells for the 20-inch rims and 265/35 tires. The carbon-fiber hood is vented to extract hot air and to reduce pressure buildup in the engine compartment at high speed.
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Like the aerodynamics, the Project 8’s suspension can also be manually tweaked for a day at the track, thanks to adjustable spring platforms that allow the ride height to be dropped 0.6 inch. Other changes to the suspension include new SVO-designed billet steering knuckles with Formula 1-style silicon nitride ceramic bearings up front that reduce mass and friction, while the rear upper control arm assembly features ball joints rather than bushings to increase stiffness and stability.
Project 8’s carbon-ceramic brakes are another first for Jaguar. Designed for higher performance than the carbon-ceramic matrix units fitted to the Jaguar F-Type SVR, the front rotors, which are clamped by six-piston calipers, measure 15.8 inches while the rears are 15.6 inches. The system uses motorsport-grade brake fluid, and it can independently brake the inside wheels of the car during cornering to help turn-in response.
The 591 hp and 516 lb-ft of torque delivered by the 5.0-liter engine under the hood shows the bandwidth of Jaguar’s supercharged V-8. All that extra grunt—the most generated by any Jaguar road car engine—has been achieved with minimal engineering changes: A unique air intake system, fed by ducts in the front bumper, and a new free-flowing titanium exhaust with four 3.5-inch tailpipes has enabled SVO engineers to get more air through the engine more rapidly and recalibrate the engine management software accordingly. Peak power comes at 6,500 rpm, and maximum torque is available from 3,500 rpm to 5,000 rpm.
Transmission is the ZF eight-speed automatic long used by Jaguar, but it’s been tuned to deliver shifts in as little as 200 milliseconds and to shift nonsequentially—going directly from, say, eighth to second under extreme braking. Drive is distributed to all four wheels via beefier driveshafts front and rear, and the rear axle is fitted with an electronic active differential that precisely monitors the torque distributed to each tire. To keep the diff cool during track days, an oil cooler is located in the rear diffuser.


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