Free Reads

Back to Library >
ti icon

Free Reads

Type approval: the new Jaguar has a name

12 hours ago

Writer:

Richard Aucock | Journalist

Date:

13 May 2026

ti icon

Library

Boreham Motorworks Alan Mann 68 Edition review

A perfect recreation of Frank Gardner’s championship-winning Mk1 Ford Escort. As good as it looks? Even better, says Dan Prosser

Almost Great: Smart ForTwo

Many of Ti’s readers (and a few of our writers) are too young to remember the Eighties in any detail. Shoulder-pads were wide, Crockett’s white Testarossa in Miami Vice...

The last thing Jaguar needs is another controversy. And, by confirming the name of its new electric four-door GT, it’s unlikely to get it. Following the Type 00 concept, meet Type 01, the rather vanilla name for the first production car of its much-vaunted new era.

It’s pretty easy to decipher, says Jaguar. ‘0’ is for zero tailpipe emissions; ‘1’, because it’s the first model in a new generation. So Jaguar’s adopted the Polestar approach to model names – but added the ‘Type’ in a nod to the brand equity it turns out the firm does have after all.

By the way, it’s pronounced ‘zero-one’, not ‘oh-one’. We learnt that in passing from MD Rawdon Glover, giving loyalists plenty of opportunity to correct others, Joey from Friends-style.

ti icon

Library

‘Schumacher’, the documentary

Last month, when the first trailer of the documentary about Michael Schumacher was released, I wrote a piece about my hopes and fears for it, which you can read here...

Overrated: Honda S2000

It seemed to have it all: a screaming engine, rear drive, six speeds and perfect balance. Sadly the reality proved somewhat different, recalls Steve Sutcliffe

From Type 00 to Type 01

The Ti consensus is that the name is… fine. Perhaps a bit underwhelming, says Gez Medinger. Dan Prosser agrees, ‘but Jag has never done romantic names, so maybe it’s on brand’. Arguably, it’s more fitting than the other mooted option, XJ. Pick that and you bet there’d have been mutiny from those who care little for Jaguar’s brave new era.

There’s also a bit more logic going into the name than the first Jaguar road car ‘type’, the C-Type. Officially, that was the XK120-C, where ‘C’ stood for ‘competition’. It was the press and public who christened it C-Type (A-Type and B-Type were cylinder heads, not cars). Aided by a Le Mans win, the name stuck, and Jaguar followed it up with D-Type, E-Type, S-Type and, much later, the F-Type (dare we mention the X-Type? Well, Jaguar’s hardly going to).

Will the Jaguar Type 01 live up to its famous forebears?

ti icon

Subscribe

Join The Intercooler's thriving community today and get access to:

Award-winning magazine

Award-winning magazine

Ad-free on website and app

Subscriber-only podcasts

Subscriber-only podcasts

Listen without ads

Audio articles

Audio articles

Listen on the go

Full Library access

Full Library access

1500+ stories, 2m+ words

Subscribe

What else have we learnt from Jaguar’s latest update? That prototypes will appear at the Monaco E-Prix this weekend, taking to the track in a ‘distinctive camouflage livery’. And that the car will be fully revealed ‘later in 2026’. That’s why we’re only getting a teaser of the logo – which is going to appear on the so-called ‘strikethrough motif’ where the bonnet meets the windscreen.

Pretty discreet, in other words – again, a bit like the stickers you get on the front doors of a Polestar. That controversial new Jaguar script will do the heavy lifting front and rear. Not that you’re likely to mistake this dramatically-proportioned car for anything else on the road.

‘We have reimagined Jaguar for a new era, with inspiration from what has gone before,’ said Glover. ‘The Type 01 name is part of that story – for me, the zero also signifies a complete brand reset, and the ‘1’, our first car for a new chapter, a ‘“one of a kind”.’

At least until Jaguar Type 02 arrives; but there’s a lot riding on this one being a success before we get that far.

ti icon

Subscribe

Join The Intercooler's thriving community today and get access to:

Award-winning magazine

Award-winning magazine

Ad-free on website and app

Subscriber-only podcasts

Subscriber-only podcasts

Listen without ads

Audio articles

Audio articles

Listen on the go

Full Library access

Full Library access

1500+ stories, 2m+ words

Subscribe