Jaguar XJ220 3D Model

Jaguar XJ220 supercar 3D model featuring an accurate, high-detail design of the iconic 1990s performance coupe. Perfect for 3D artists, visualization projects, and automotive fans, offering a clean, detailed exterior suitable for renderings, presentations, and digital display.

Jaguar XJ220 3D Model

Overview

Download a high-quality Jaguar XJ220 Supercar 3D model designed for clear visualization, accurate proportion, and production-ready rendering. This detailed 3D asset is ideal for game development, CGI advertising, architectural/automotive visualization, product presentations, motion graphics, and personal creative projects.

Usage Patterns:

  • Games & real-time scenes: Use the model for racing, automotive, and showroom environments in real-time engines.
  • Visualization & marketing: Perfect for promotional renders, banners, and thumbnail artwork.
  • CGI & animations: Great for motion graphics, turntables, commercials, and scene compositing.
  • 3D printing & design previews: Suitable for pre-visualization workflows and design iteration (check scale/units if needed).
  • Education & portfolio: Add a premium supercar asset to your portfolio or training project.

File Format Support (Download):

  • MAX (3ds Max)
  • OBJ
  • FBX
  • C4D (Cinema 4D)
  • BLEND (Blender)

Software Compatibility: Works seamlessly with popular 3D tools including Blender, 3ds Max, Maya, Cinema 4D, and Unreal Engine, along with other software that supports the listed formats.

Bring an iconic Jaguar XJ220 supercar look to your projects—download the model in your preferred format and start creating renders, animations, or real-time scenes right away.

Tags

  • jaguar
  • xj220
  • cars
  • autos
  • automobiles
  • transport
  • speed
  • wheels
  • tires
  • civil
  • motors
  • vehicles
  • uk
  • supercar

License

  • Royalty-Free License.
  • Commercial and editorial use according to site license terms.
  • Redistribution of source files is not allowed.
  • Please review the full license details before using the model in published work.