Category Archives: Motor reviews

Aircross flair and practicality

Citroen C5 Aircross

By Bill McCarthy

You will have read this before elsewhere no doubt, but Citroen produce some striking looking motors.

It should be no surprise, therefore, that  C5 Aircross SUV is no different. 

Well, it is a bit different, with a number of innovations including its modular design which includes three sliding, adjustable rear seats which incline and fold to offer a multitude of cargo carrying and stowage options. Capacity ranges from 580 to 720 litres and a huge 1,630 to the roof with the seats folded.

In fact it mirrors the looks of many of the brand, with its muscular profile, high ground clearance, striking light clusters to front and rear and the now familiar airbump protectors to doors and wheel arch guards.

It also has what appear to be two slim grilles and equally slim lights and subtle integrated roofers. Large air scoops and genuinely striking two-tone alloy wheels further distinguish it from the crowd.

 The interior is high quality, if not quite up to the sibling DS standard, it is nevertheless stylish, functional and incredibly practical. It seems logically designed with eight inch touchscreen and a 12.3 inch customisable TFT instrument display with multi-function trip computer.

The touchscreen controls navigation, infotainment and connectivity via voice recognition for radio, nav and phone and Mirror screen-Mirrorlink, Apple carplay, Android auto. It also has two USB sockets, six speaker sound system,

The darkness of the dash and upholstery is only really offset by chrome trim to air vents, steering wheel and the binnacle and large glass areas letting the light in. There is a large centre console accommodating, in this case, the auto gearshift, a large oddment container and two large cupholders. Practicality rules and addition there is an illuminated glove box fixed centre storage box with sliding lid, door pockets front and rear, hinged parcel shelf and map pockets on front seat backs

It is a  spacious vehicle and the large, raked windscreen allows plenty of light into the cabin. The five individual seats are large and comfortable and there is plenty of leg and headroom to front and rear thanks to the squarish shape

It is powered by a lively but frugal two litre engine, mated to a seamless eight-speed automatic gearbox.

Acceleration is brisk for the type of car, although SUV buyers are unlikely to be looking for hot hatch type performance –  although the 0-60mph figure of 8.5 seconds is rapid enough. Economy is good for a big car,  delivering a real world combined figure of between 43 and 47 mpg.

On the road, the two litre diesel unit has plenty of punch and a good amount of torque, so it pulls well in all gears is refined and occupants are well shielded from road, engine and wind noise.

Handling as you would expect is more oil tanker than racing car, but unless you think you’re a boy racer, it never really comes into the equation.

It is built for comfort and there is plenty of it with a softish ride aided by the Progressive Hydraulic suspension soaking up all but the very worst lump and potholes.

 It is also packed with equipment including high levels of safety kit including, assisted braking, stability an traction control, hill start, full complement of airbags, ice warning and coffee break alert.

Parking camera, parking sensors, electric, heated door mirrors, sensing wipers and two position boot floor are also available on this model in addition to a raft of standard kit.

The C5 is an innovative SUV, with clever design, five full size seats, large cargo space and hi-tech bells and whistles and with a starting price of between £24 and £25k it offers plenty for the money

Factfile

Citroen C5 Aircross Flair Blue HDi 180 EAT8

Price: £31,135

Mechanical: 174bhp, 1,997cc, four cylinder turbo diesel engine driving front wheels via eight-speed auto  gearbox

Max speed: 131mph

0-62mph: 8.6 seconds

Combined mpg: 43-47 mpg

Insurance group: 25 

CO2 emissions: 125g/km

Warranty: 3yrs/60,000

Skoda first among VW equals

Skoda Scala SE L 1.5 TSI

By Bill McCarthy

IS that a Golf? someone said as they looked at the Skoda parked on the road.

You can see why he made the mistake, there is definitely a Golf look to the latest of Skoda’s ever-expanding range of vehicles.

The Scala hatchback model is positioned between Fabia and similar-sized Octavia and is the first to be built on the parent group Volkswagen’s modular MQB-A0 platform.

In typical Skoda fashion, it also adds those quirky, but extremely useful little extras, started years ago with the concealed umbrella. Now what the firm calls Simply Clever touches add an electric tailgate that includes a Tip-To-Close function and an electrically retractable towbar.

Both optional features features are new to the segment, while the familiar ice scraper with a tyre tread depth gauge, along with neat integrated funnel in the lid of the windscreen washer tank remain, as does the umbrella.

Neat touches, but in this segment the car needs to be better than just good.

It comes with a host of  kit in three trim grades; S, SE and SE L, while three engine options, two petrol and one diesel, with outputs from 95PS to 150PS are available with DSG gearbox options.

It does look good, without being a showstopper, with narrow, tapered headlights flanking the dominant grille, which has a large airscoop below housing the driving lights. The 17-inch ‘stratos’ alloys also add a nice finishing touch.

The interior too is high quality with soft touch finish and microsuede black upholstery complemented by chrome detailing to handles, gearshift, handbrake, dash and door panelling.

The centrepiece is the 9.2 inch multi function screen which controls navigation and connectivity via Bluetooth, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto and MirrorLink and the eight-speaker sound system.

The customisable digital virtual cockpit is also available on this model and other controls are logical and well placed with many mirrored on the multi-function steering whee.

The wide glass area gives the car a roomy feel and there is plenty of head and legroom

Stowage space is good with a large boot, which offers 467 litres of space, opening up to 1,410  litres with the split seats folded. There are also storage compartments under the front seats and a cooled glovebox.

Starting at £18,585, standard kit includes 16-inch alloys, LED headlights, smartphone connectivity touch screen, and a raft of safety features which include parking sensors, emergency braking and lane departure assist.

This SE L model ups the ante with the virtual cockpit, powered door mirrors, rain sensing wipers, privacy glass and much more.

On the road, the car is a lively performer with the 150PS 1.5 litre petrol engine mated to a six speed gearbox delivering pace and decent economy.

 The car hits 60mph in a smidge over eight seconds, warm hatch pace, while delivering fuel economy of between 42 and 48mpg.

It is a refined unit with plenty of torque so overtaking on the motorway is a breeze. Handling is precise and the ride is slightly firm and can sometimes feel unsettled on lesser road surfaces. But it handles well with the 17-inch tyres offering plenty of grip on bends and corners.

An optional Sport Chassis Control system makes its debut  with suspension lowered by 15mm along with valve-reversible shock absorbers that can alter the damping characteristics to provide a sportier driving experience. 

To be compared to the Golf is praise indeed with the Czech-based manufacturers now offering an ever-increasing portfolio of quality vehicles. No longer bargain basement, but still very competitively priced.

The Scala is a worthy challenger in one of the most competitive of segments.

Factfile

Skoda Scala SE L 1.5 TSI

Price: £22,130

Mechanical: 150PS  1,498cc, 4cyl petrol engine driving front wheels wheels via six-speed manual gearbox

Max speed: 137mph

0-62mph: 8.2 seconds

Combined mpg: 42.2 to 47.9

Insurance group: 21E

CO2 emissions: 111g/km

Warranty: 3 yrs/60,000 miles