1966 Jaguar Mk X Reviews

You'll find all our 1966 Jaguar Mk X reviews right here. 1966 Jaguar Mk X prices range from $7,040 for the Mk X 42 to $9,570 for the Mk X 42.

Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.

The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Jaguar dating back as far as 1962.

Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Jaguar Mk X, you'll find it all here.

Jaguar Reviews and News

Jaguar F-Pace packs in more style and punch
By Byron Mathioudakis · 15 Sep 2020
Jaguar has refreshed its second best-selling model for 2021 with an extensive redesign, all-new six-cylinder engine options, a complete cabin overhaul, next-generation multimedia technology, improved safety and sharper pricing.With UK production commencin
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Auto industry survey results revealed
By Tung Nguyen · 27 Aug 2020
Automotive industry research experts JD Power have revealed their list of 'The Best Cars of 2020'.However, with the brand no longer offering a dedicated Australian survey after a buyout last year, the results are now much more US-market centric.Regardless
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Pivotal car subscription launched by JLR
By Matt Campbell · 08 Jul 2020
Jaguar Land Rover has launched its Pivotal car subscription service.
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New SUVs: Latest news and model releases
By Stephen Corby · 05 Jul 2020
To modern Australian families, the SUV is what a Commodore or a Falcon used to be - the sensible, obvious and most common choice of family vehicle.
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Best new cars arriving in 2017
By Peter Anderson · 05 Jul 2020
Is 2017 the year of the new car for your garage? It's pretty easy to work out what's available now, but here are the most exciting models that are yet to arrive in showrooms.
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How long does it take to charge an electric car?
By Stephen Corby · 05 Jul 2020
No matter who you are or where you live, the first question anyone who is about to dip their toe into the electrified water of EV ownership asks is always the same; how long does it take charge an electric car? (Followed by, can I have a Tesla please?)The answer is a complicated one, I’m afraid, as it depends on the car and the charging infrastructure, but the short answer is this; not as long you might think, and that figure is dropping all the time. Nor, as most people tend to think, is it likely that you’ll need to charge it every day, but that’s another story.The easiest way to explain it all is to examine those two elements - what kind of car do you own and what kind of charging station will you be using - separately, so you have all the facts at your fingertips. What type of car do you own?As it stands, there are really only a handful of pure-electric cars on sale in Australia at the moment, with products from Tesla, Nissan, BMW, Renault, Jaguar and Hyundai. Though that number will grow, of course, with models due from Audi, Mercedes-Benz, Kia and more - and political pressure building to increase the number of EVs on our roads.Each of those brands quotes different charging times (largely dependent on the size of each car's battery packs).Nissan says charging its Leaf from zero to full can take up to 24 hours using the standard power at your house, but if you invest in a special 7kW home charger the recharge time drops to around 7.5hrs. If you use a rapid charger, you can top up the battery from 20 per cent to 80 per cent in around an hour. But we’ll come back to charger types in a moment. Then there’s Tesla; the brand that made EVs cool measures its charge time on a distance-per-hour scale. So for the Model 3, you’ll get around 48km in range for every hour of charging that your car is plugged in at home. A Tesla Wall Box or an on-the-road Supercharger will significantly reduce that time, of course.Enter Jaguar, with its i-Pace SUV. The British brand (the first of the traditional premium marques to get an EV to marker) claims an 11km per hour recharge rating using home power. The bad news? That roughly equals 43 hours for a full charge, which seems staggeringly impractical. Installing a special home charger (which most owners will) increases that rate to 35km of range per hour.Finally, we’ll look at Hyundai’s just-launched Kona Electric. The brand says from empty to 80 per cent of charge takes nine hours and 35 minutes, using a home wall unit, or 75 minutes using a fast-charging station. Plugged into the mains at home? That’ll be 28 hours for a full charge of the battery pack.How long do the batteries in an electric car last? The sad truth is that they begin to degrade, albeit slowly, from the first time you recharge, but most manufacturers offer an eight-year battery warranty if something should go wrong. What kind of electric car charger do you use?Ah, this is the part that really matters, as the type of charger you use to power you EV can cut time off the road to a fraction of that you’d spend if you only do your top up by drawing mains power.While it’s true that most people think they’ll be charging their vehicle at home, simply plugging it into the mains when they get home from work, that’s actually the slowest way to pump juice into your batteries. The most common alternative is to invest in “wall box” infrastructure at home, be it from the manufacture themselves of via an aftermarket provider like Jet Charge, which increases the rapid flow of power to the car, usually to around 7.5kW.The most well-known solution is Tesla’s Wall Box, which can up the power output to 19.2kW - enough to deliver 71km per hour of charging for the Model 3, 55km for the Model S and 48km for the Model X.But just as with an internal-combustion-engined vehicle, you can still recharge while on the road, and when you do, you don’t want to spend the better part of an entire day glued to a power point. Enter, then, fast charging stations, which are specifically set up to get you on the road as quickly as possible using a 50kW or a 100kW flow of power.Again, the best-known of these are the Tesla Superchargers, which have started being phased in on freeways and in cities on the east coast of Australia, and which recharge you battery pack to 80-per-cent full in around 30 minutes. They were once (unbelievably) free to use, but that was only ever going to last so long. There are other options, of course. Most notably the NRMA, which has begun the roll out of a free-for-members network of 40 fast-charging stations around Australia. Or Chargefox, which is in the process of installing “ultra-fast” charging stations in Australia, promising between 150kW and 350kW of power, which can deliver some 400km of range in 15 minutes. Porsche is also planning to rollout its own chargers around the world, which are, cleverly, called Turbo Chargers.
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Best good-looking car buys by segment
By Craig Duff · 05 Jul 2020
We spend weeks comparing new car performance and prices... then fall for a shiny one.
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Jaguar E-Pace 2020 review: Chequered Flag P250
By James Cleary · 02 Jul 2020
Jaguar's E-Pace is a compact, five-seat premium SUV, going in to bat against some tough Euro and Japanese opposition. It's well equipped and super space-efficient, but does it have what it takes to head the pack?
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Jaguar ups the pace of its flagship EV
By Tom White · 01 Jul 2020
Jaguar's 2021 I-Pace might look the same, but it has significant updates under the skin which aim to keep it ahead of more recently-launched premium EV rivals.
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Jaguar says cars will become more like phones
By Tom White · 23 Jun 2020
Jaguar says the importance of software updates will see future electric vehicles start to be thought of more like phones or laptops than in a category of their own.
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