





The driving position is  accommodating, the design modern and ergonomically sound. The centre  console is smartly arranged around a touch-screen monitor, which  controls audio, sat nav and climate settings. Materials are expensive  and build quality is excellent. There's a lot of plastic on display and  the Jag can't match the tailor-made feel of a Maserati, but otherwise we  can't fault the cabin. The rear seats are only useful for storage, but  with a 300-litre boot and hatchback tailgate, the XK is reasonably  practical. Well-equipped too, with heated, leather, electric and memory  seats standard, plus xenon lights, sat nav and a CD changer. 10,000-mile  service intervals are relatively short, but the bills are affordable  for a sports car, while retained values are excellent. But, despite the  lightweight construction, that thirsty V8 will still cost you. And,  sleek as it is, we can't understand why the firm has fitted an  old-fashioned electric pop-up aerial - it looks ugly and out of place on  the elegant bodywork.


