2022 Ineos Grenadier 4×4 Prototype Review

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We get a drive of the new Ineos Grenadier ahead of its arrival in Australia.

This wasn’t in the script. On the day we were set to drive the new Ineos Grenadier off road in prototype form, heavy rain fell upon the disused construction site chosen for the test. Challenging in the dry, even more so in the rain with deep, slippery mud to churn through, the Grenadier would have its work cut out. We have already completed a ride-along in Australia, but now we’re getting to drive a prototype as final production nears.

On paper, though, it should be up to the task. The Grenadier takes obvious inspiration from the previous Land Rover Defender, and looks to reinvigorate the concept of the original with modern tech. Like the Defender, it too features a square design, body-on-frame construction and beam axles, but the Grenadier is a ground-up project that shares no parts with the Land Rover. Reservations in Australia are open now and orders will begin in April this year, with prices starting from around $85,000 before on-road costs.

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Behind that bluff nose lies a choice of 3.0-litre turbocharged straight-six engines from BMW – a diesel with 180kW and 550Nm of torque, or a petrol version producing 210kW and 450Nm, which we drove. Whichever you choose, drive is sent through an eight-speed ZF automatic transmission, and there’s permanent all-wheel drive with selectable low range for serious off-roading. The centre diff is a mechanically locking item, with optional electronically actuated units on each axle.

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Inside, the Grenadier is a clean-sheet design with a blend of contemporary tech and no-nonsense utility. The 12.3-inch infotainment system is also sourced from BMW and runs a re-skinned version of iDrive, and apart from the gear selector, the rest of the cabin is bespoke.

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There’s no traditional gauge cluster, and the boxy dashboard architecture trades luxury for a hard-wearing plastic construction. The control panel on the dashboard features large, clearly labelled switches for the climate and audio controls, designed for use with gloves, and the view out of the letterbox windscreen will be familiar to previous Defender owners – albeit with much more elbow room.

The Grenadier looks best caked in grime, and approaching our pre-production test car, it’s not short on presence. It’s a larger vehicle than an original Defender, and with black plastic cladding jutting out from the bodywork and optional off-road tyres, it looks even more purposeful. At over two metres tall you really do climb into the Grenadier, but the trade-off is 264mm of ground clearance and a usefully high vantage point from behind the wheel.

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Aim the nose at the terrain, ease into the throttle and the turbocharged straight-six unit has little trouble shifting the SUV with its smooth torque delivery. The Grenadier immediately feels robust, and although soft mud doesn’t test structural integrity like a rocky track might, the cabin feels well isolated from the worst of the surface.

The progressive-rate Eibach spring and Bilstein damper set-up is compliant over large bumps, and coupled with impressive wheel articulation from the live axles, you get the sense that the car is maximising grip from all four tyres.

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The Grenadier finds remarkable traction over the most challenging sections. Some patience is required while the car snakes around over the thick ooze, but it rarely runs out of ability. The Ineos was occasionally stopped in its tracks when scrambling up some slopes, but with a touch more commitment it scaled the trickiest inclines.

Shift to manual gearbox control, select first gear and the Grenadier is equally impressive on the way down. Using engine braking with feet off both pedals, the car crawls along safely without losing grip, and doesn’t catch the bodywork when it meets flat ground thanks to approach and departure angles of 35.5 and 36.1 degrees respectively.

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Unsurprisingly, the steering felt eerily light over the slippery wet surface, but more of an issue was the steering wheel itself. While navigating tighter sections and working the wheel, the two-spoke design means it’s not easy to judge its orientation when applying armfuls of lock, despite the red stripe at the 12 o’clock position.

The Grenadier is genuinely impressive off-road, and with its sturdy ladder chassis, beefy body protection and hard-wearing interior, its utilitarian feel is far closer to the original Defender than the new one.

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The bigger question is how it will perform on tarmac – the off-road focused componentry suggests that it could be compromised as an SUV for lifestyle-oriented buyers, so we’ll save our final judgement for the full road test.

From this early taste of a pre-production prototype, the Ineos Grenadier is seriously capable in the rough stuff. It has the off-road prowess you’d expect from a reinvented Land Rover Defender, but with a dose of modern tech that should broaden its appeal. We’ll have to wait and see whether this all-terrain focus has compromised its road manners, but the Grenadier fits the bill so far.

Yousuf Ashraf

Model: Ineos Grenadier
Price: From $85,500 (Australia)
Engine: 3.0-litre 6cyl turbo diesel or petrol
Power/torque: 180kW/550Nm, 210kW/450Nm
Transmission: Eight-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
0-100km/h: N/A
Top speed: N/A
Economy: N/A
CO2: N/A
On sale: April 2022

 

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