The 3 L engine in the Land Rover Defender is at the top end of what this displacement produces — serious injection pressure, sophisticated turbocharger management, and a factory calibration that leaves room on the table by design. These engines are well-engineered enough that a careful, dyno-developed map extracts meaningful gains without asking anything the hardware isn't already built to handle.
Our dyno-developed map for the Land Rover Defender adds an average of 49 kW (24%) at the wheels and 196 Nm (28%) of engine torque. At this level the car genuinely changes character — overtaking on single-lane highways stops being a commitment, and the mid-range pull from around 1,500 to 3,000 rpm is transformed. You notice it most on the highway on-ramp and in the first third of an overtake.
In practical terms, that works out to around 9 fewer tanks of diesel over 40,000 km. At a typical 15,000 km annual mileage, most Land Rover Defender owners save roughly 237 L and $427 per year at the pump — purely from improved combustion efficiency at part-throttle, where diesels spend most of their time.
This Land Rover Defender variant ran from 2024–2025. The factory calibration changed very little across that production window; we have the original file for each year and always confirm which one matches the car in front of us before we start.