2015 Jaguar XJL Portfolio AWD review

2015 Jaguar XJL Portfolio AWD review

The XJ sedan is (for now) the largest vehicle that Jaguar makes, and this XJL version is the biggest of the big. Longer from nose to tail and more spacious on the inside, the 2015 XJL shifts even more of its focus toward keeping its driver and passengers swaddled in the lap of luxury.

Largely unchanged since its debut in 2010, this generation of XJ and XJL is starting to feel a bit dated, particularly where tech is concerned. However, its flowing design has stood the test of time and "old luxury" never really goes out of style.

Editor's note: The 2015 Jaguar XJL Portfolio AWD persists largely unchanged since we last looked at the model in2014. As a result, this new review retains portions of our previous evaluation along with new insights and observations.

The second-best seats in the house

The primary difference between the model we're looking at today and the Jaguar XJ has everything to do with that extra letter "L," which indicates a long wheelbase. The XJL adds 4.9 extra inches to its wheelbase, which translates directly into the same amount of extra legroom for back-seat passengers.

By itself, that's a huge step up in rear-seat comfort and luxury, but our example doesn't stop there. We've also got the Premium Rear Seat Package: a $7,750 option that overhauls the second row. The rear outboard seats gain motorized reclining and upper-back articulation. A multimode massage function with heated and ventilated surfaces pamper passengers while seat memory keeps them from having to futz around too much with getting just the right seating position.

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The extra wheelbase translates directly to extra legroom. Premium seating is the icing on the cake. Antuan Goodwin/CNET

The package also adds electric side window shades that give rear passengers a bit of privacy and reduce glare on the dual 10.2-inch screens of the Rear Seat Entertainment System. From their positions on the back of the front seats, these non-touch-sensitive displays can be controlled via an included IR remote control to display infotainment, navigation data with ETA for the current trip, and video sources. Audio for this system is either piped through the main stereo or via a pair of wireless headphones, allowing up to three different A/V sources throughout the car (front, right-rear, and left-rear). Just below the displays, completing the first-row-airline-seat illusion, are dual "business tables" that can be folded out to hold a laptop or, as I learned, a messy barbecue lunch.

Between the upgraded outboard seats is a wide center armrest console that folds up, allowing the XJL to seat up to five people. However, that center seat isn't really a pleasant one for anyone but a small child thanks to the transmission tunnel hump and shoulder room that's generous for two, but a tight squeeze for three passengers.

2015 Jaguar XJL Portfolio AWD

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A dual-pane sunroof lets light in, giving the already spacious cabin an airy feel. Antuan Goodwin/CNET

Up front, our XJL was equipped with the optional $800 front-seat massage system, which is even more customizable than the rear's, thanks to its touch integration with Jaguar's infotainment system. That's on top of the 18-way power adjustment, heated and cooled ventilated seating surfaces, and memory functions for the driver and front-passenger seats, features that are standard on the XJL but optional on the shorter XJ.

The XJL's cabin uses a visually interesting variety of high-quality materials, ranging from pleasant-to-the-touch leather trim for most of the dashboard and doors to shiny chrome trim and glossy wood. Though I'm not a fan of the fingerprint-magnet black gloss trim that makes up most of the XJL's center stack and console, it is also nice to look at when it's clean (and not reflecting errant sunlight directly into the driver's eyes).

However, here and there, it's possible to see hints of cheapness that stand out starkly in the XJL's otherwise immaculate cabin. The most heinous examples are the paddle shifters located on the steering wheel, which are made of dull, hollow plastic that you'd expect to find on an economy car, not one bearing an as-tested price approaching $100K. Usually, automakers spend more materials budget on these "touch points" where the driver comes into regular and direct contact with the vehicle, but Jag seems to have overlooked this issue. I'd expect metal shifters on a car in this price class or -- when you consider that the XJL isn't really a "performance car" anyway -- no paddles at all. As is, they feel like an afterthought.

The tech: What's here, what's missing

This generation of the Jaguar XJ has been around since 2010 -- and its dashboard infotainment system for nearly as long -- but the tech has aged gracefully and seems to fit well with the XJL's "old luxury" feel.

Based around an 8-inch color touchscreen, the system puts navigation, Bluetooth telephony and an ever-broadening range of digital and analog audio sources at the driver's fingertips in a well-organized way. The navigation system uses 2D maps and doesn't feature any of the connected technologies or 3D-rendered graphics that you'd find on the car's competitors from BMW or Audi, but the maps are crisply rendered, featuring traffic data and smooth animations.

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The complicated Jaguar infotainment system is getting a bit long in the tooth. Antuan Goodwin/CNET

However, the standard voice command system requires the driver to slog through too many tedious prompts for address input and needs too much confirmation. Seriously, after half a dozen prompts for city, street, number, and the like, the system asks you if you want to input the address and then asks again if you want to begin navigation. Why do you think I went through the trouble of inputting, Jaguar, if I didn't want to go there?! Let's go! It's just faster to have a passenger key the address in, which thankfully is possible.

Also missing from the feature set is Bluetooth MAP support, which would augment the hands-free calling functionality with the options to have incoming text messages read aloud and to auto-reply, reducing driver distraction by removing the temptation to reach for the phone for every notification. However, I doubt the XJL's prospective clientele will miss it.

Standard audio sources include USB with iPod/iPhone connectivity, Bluetooth audio streaming, HD Radio and satellite radio, CD/DVD playback and auxiliary audio and video inputs. Our Premium Rear Seat-equipped example also featured a dedicated rear USB port and auxiliary video input, as well.

Audio reproduction duties are handled by the Meridian Audio system: a 380-watt, 14-speaker setup that most would describe as audiophile quality. This system handled almost every genre of music that I threw at it and did a particularly good job with reproducing and staging human voices. However, it's not the apex of audio available on the XJL.

For a mere $2,300, you can upgrade to an 825-watt, 20-speaker Meridian Surround system or, for $4,180, there's the top-tier 1,300-watt, 26-speaker, brilliant Meridian Reference sound system. The Reference system's dual subwoofers account for two of those drivers and three speakers located in the rear of the front seats beneath the monitors provide dedicated audio for the already pampered passengers.



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