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The New Land Rover Defender Is Officially Coming to America and It Looks Like a Real Off-Roader

The reimagined SUV will go on sale in 2020 after debuting this year.

Land Rover

At the beginning 0f 2016, after 68 years of production, the final Land Rover Defender (which succeeded the Series I, II, and III) rolled off the assembly line in Solihull, England. But well before that happened, we knew that Land Rover was working on a successor to the iconic model. Now, following multiple concepts, years of speculation, and a bunch of spy photos, Land Rover has finally, officially announced that the all-new Defender will be revealed at some point in 2019.

Even bigger news: Land Rover also confirmed that the new Defender will be sold in the United States, making it the first Defender to be officially sold here since 1997. (The SUV will be sold in Canada, too.) But like with the hazy reveal date, Land Rover has said nothing about the on-sale date of the new Defender besides saying it will be available in 2020. In fact, Land Rover gives almost no details about the new Defender, aside from saying it will be a "revolutionary product" with a much larger appeal than the old models, and that it will have all the driver-assistance and tech features that customers expect from a modern vehicle.

Land Rover does say that the company began conducting on- and off-road development testing of the new model throughout North America earlier this month, with the SUV being tested in temperatures from -40 to 120 degrees Fahrenheit and at altitudes of over 13,000 feet. Seemingly assuaging fears that the new Defender's unibody platform and independent front and rear suspension will hamper it off-road when compared to its go-anywhere predecessor, the company insists that the new Defender will be "the most off-road capable Land Rover vehicle ever."

To go along with the testing announcement, Land Rover released photos of a new Defender in camouflage in both an off-road environment and in New York City. We can see a few additional details not present in previous spy photos, like vents on the front fenders and a rear-mounted spare tire. The camo wrap is covered in the names of famous off-roading locations in the States like Death Valley, Moab, and the Rockies. Land Rover only provided photos of a four-door Defender; we previously have seen two-doors testing as well, so this could be an indication that only the more practical version will be brought overseas.

Every year, World Land Rover Day is celebrated on April 30, commemorating the first Land Rover's debut at the Amsterdam auto show on April 30, 1948. To go along with the celebrations, Land Rover has released a bunch of new images of camouflaged 2020 Defender prototypes undergoing testing all over the world and has given updates on the upcoming SUV's rigorous testing regime.
As part of the testing, Land Rover is putting a new Defender through its paces at the Borana Conservancy in Kenya as part of the brand's 15-year partnership with Tusk Trust, a British charity for wildlife conservation. A special prototype with a Tusk-themed camo pattern will go through "a series of real-world trials" at the 35,000-acre nature reserve, including towing heavy loads and carrying cargo across "unforgiving terrain."

That prototype, shown here, is our best look yet at the new Defender, featuring a tight camo wrap but no fake body panels like those found on all the other Defenders you see in these images. We can see a rounded hood and roof, smooth shoulders with a crisp character line, and some additional details not visible on other prototypes.

In addition to the Tusk testing announcement and new photos of the Defender in different locales, Land Rover has given new details about the testing that Defender prototypes have been going through all across the world.

Land Rover says the Defender has been driven nearly 750,000 miles in real-world testing so far and that, by the time it debuts, the SUV will have "passed more than 45,000 individual tests."

It has been subjected to conditions from sub-40-degree cold in the Arctic to 122-degree heat in the desert, and it has been tested at altitudes of 10,000 feet in the Rocky Mountains.

Land Rover also says the Defender has gone through development on sand dunes in Dubai, rocky trails in Moab, muddy roads in the U.K., and at the Nürburgring racetrack in Germany—yes, seriously.

In contrast to the Defender's globe-circling testing program, all of the design and development work has been done out of Land Rover's Gaydon facilities in England.

Land Rover says that the Defender will be built at a new plant in Nitra, Slovakia, and we previously learned that it would be revealed at some point in 2019 before going on sale in the United States in 2020.

Beyond knowing that it will ride on a unibody platform and come with either two or four doors, we don't have many concrete details on the new Defender, but Land Rover says it will be "the toughest and most capable Land Rover vehicle ever made." As it should be.

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