Jaguar F-Type production ends after 87,000 examples built

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Final petrol sports car leaves Castle Bromwich factory as brand gears up for electric reinvention

The final Jaguar F-Type has rolled off the firm’s Castle Bromwich production line, ahead of its transition into a maker of low-volume electric luxury cars. The F-Type was assembled exactly 50 years after the final E-Type, with its specification referencing its ancestor – a Giola Green convertible with a tan leather interior and a black roof. The final example will join the Jaguar Daimler Heritage Trust’s collection at Gaydon, along with the last XE, XF and XF Sportbrake.

Production of the F-Pace will remain at Solihull and the E-Pace and I-Pace will continue to be assembled in Graz, Austria, until next year. Jaguar’s next electric car, a grand tourer on the brand-new JEA platform, will be unveiled later this year. It will have a range of 430 miles, a starting price north of £100,000, and is expected to pack a dual-motor powertrain with a combined output above 575bhp.

 

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