Category Archives: Motoring

New Swift better than ever

Premium touches for Suzuki’s supermini

When it comes to small cars, Suzuki knows a thing or two. Take the new Swift, revamped for 2024 and redefining what a supermini stands for. The firm also knows its customers and that’s why the model has sold more than nine million since its 2004 introduction.

Suzuki is determined to continue in the supermini market, given that many manufacturers pulling out of the sector. Notably, Ford with the Fiesta and the Japanese firm sees this as an opportunity to hoover up extra sales.

Built on a lightweight platform and retaining previous dimensions, it offers improved performance and economy and lower emissions and in the case of the first couple of hundred yards of driving it, recognising a much more hushed environment.

It is simply a superb value-for-money machine, that at the same time offers high levels of refinement and equipment more usually found with premium motors.

These include reversing camera, adaptive cruise control, heated front seats, a new nine inch screen and a host of safety equipment.

Suzukis generally offer bullet-proof reliability, but the Swift now offers its Service Activated Warranty for free after manufacturer warranty expires at 60,000 and until the car reaches seven years /100,000 miles provided the car is serviced by Suzuki.

Powered by a new 1.2 litre 82PS three cylinder engine with mild hybrid technology, prices start at £18,699 for the manual front wheel drive model. Step up to Ultimate and prices are still below £20k at £19,799.

Both offer automatic transmission as an extra, while the Ultimate has Suzuki’s four-wheel driver ALLGRIP option.

Still recognisable as the Swift, it retains is muscular appearance, but exterior changes include enhanced blacked-out pillars, creating a floating roof look, an eye-catching  piano-black front grille and L-shaped signature lamps.

There are redesigned LED headlamps and both models sit on 16-inch alloys.

To the rear there is an integrated rear hatch spoiler and the lights are also of the same design type as the front.

The changes are greater inside with a higher specification. For a small car, headroom is good and the latest hi-tech screen controls navigation infotainment and smartphone connectivity.

It incorporates the Suzuki Connect app, available on Android and iOS, where users can access connected services, including the ability to monitor and receive notifications about the status of their vehicle in real time, remotely lock and unlock the vehicle, and view information such as driving history and the location of their parked car.

Otherwise the interior is impressive. Hard rather than soft touch plastic finish, but the seats are comfortable with good all-round visibility while boot space is decent for the size of car. Control are robust and logically placed.

It’s a pleasant place to be and on the road, the new power unit is a lively but refined performer. Accelerate hard and you get the distinct throaty roar of a three-pot engine, but otherwise engine noise is barely perceptible. The sprint 0-60 time of 12.5 seconds feels quicker and it is a fun drive.

Claimed economy is just over 60mpg, eight per cent up on the previous model. It’s a figure which we almost reached on our test driver clocking 59.5mpg. We won’t quibble about that.

Excellent performance, but what was impressive the longer drive went on was the noise suppression. Here the firm has made big efforts to reduce NVH  (Noise, vibration, and harshness) with an adhesive applied to the under body to reduce noise and vibration into the cabin, particularly on bumpy roads.

Safety features include six airbags as standard, stability program, driver monitoring system, dual sensor brake support, lane departure warning and weaving alert, rear cross traffic alert, blind sport monitor and traffic sign recognition.

It’s simply packed with kit and technology and still well under £20k, with Suzuki offering interest-free deals for a limited period.

Skoda raises the bar

Skoda Kodiaq Sportline

By Bill McCarthy

The Kodiaq is a success story for me, a vehicle that takes Skoda up a level and a challenger in the premium segment. |It’s a clasy SUV available with either five or seven seats and keenly priced – against premium competition that is.

That does not mean its cheap. This latest model comes with a variety of trims and engine options and with the choice of  two or four wheel drive and uprated suspension. It is right up there challenging the likes of its VW, SEAT, Audi siblings, not to mention the likes of Volvo and Jaguar.

It has been around for a while now, since 2016, and had a mini makeover to offer, what the manufacturer describes as taking sustainability (All textiles used for the seat upholstery, the carpets in the cabin and the luggage compartment as well as the headliner are made of 100 percent recycled materials) and efficiency to the next level.

I t also offers for the first time LED Matrix headlights and ergonomic seats.

 It is available with two diesel and two petrol engines delivering various outputs and the first Kodiaq plug-in hybrid powertrain.

It is bigger both inside and out and in the seven-seat version, passengers in the third row of seats now have 920 millimetres of headroom, 15 millimetres more than in the predecessor.

It certainly looks the part and when offering motors at stratospheric prices it needs to be to give potential customers that option.

This particular model, the porrtline offers comprehensive equipment, typical black accents and a metal-look trim in the interior. Equipment includes just about everything you could need for a seven seater, with uprated interior design and equipment.

It has an imposing, high off the ground road presence, sitting on 20-inch alloys and featuring sport font and rear bumpers, spoiler with integrated LED brake light and Sportline badges on each wing. Black roof rails, door mirrors and radiator grille also enhance the sporty look.

 This model is packed with standard kit including the usual electric aids and gizmos, plus rear view parking camera, auto dimming mirror, climate control and a full complement of safety equipment.

It now features a 13-inch display, innovative smart dials and haptic controls. The touchscreen operates the sat nav, infotainment and smartphone connectivity, which includes ŠKODA Connect  which provides live journey information and real-time navigation details plus remote access to assistance. The dashboard itself has SportLine plaque with sports dials, alloy pedals and sporty badging throughout the cabin, just to remind you in case you forget which model you are driving.

There is a smart multifunction sports steering wheel and the rest of the dash layout is clear and logical  with the entire cabin feeling put together with high-end material and quality finish,

It is a large cabin with good head and legroom and good all round vision. In practical terms, five adults can be seated in comfort, with the third rearmost pair only really suitable for children.

Luggage capacity has also increased and in the five-seater version, it has grown by 75 litres to 910 litres without folding the rear seats down. With the rear seats folded down, capacity has increased by 40 litres to 2,105 litres.

The 190PS petrol engine drove here is smooth, flexible and economical. Mated to the VW Groups seven-speed DSG auto box, it proves a comfortable drive, slipping through the gears without any fuss.

Accelerations is brisk for such a big vehicle and hits 60mph in just ver seven seconds while delivering decent economy of around 35mpg. Acceleration is excellent and it is a fine motorway cruiser, with little noise intruding into the cabin.

 All-wheel-drive versions also offer Snow mode, which adapts the operation of the ABS, ASR and ACC (if fitted) systems, as well as the engine management and electronically controlled, all-wheel, multiplate clutch to slippery road conditions.

 Handling also decent for this type of model, with little body roll, while the ride adapts well to road or rougher terrain.

If not quite a full fat go anywhere 4×4, the VW group’s offroad capability is already well established and should prove more than capable of handling all but the roughest of terrains.

Factfile

Kodiaq Sportline 2.0 TSI 190 PS 4×4 DSG

Price: £44,330

Mechanical: 1,968cc, 190PS four cylinder petrol engine driving all wheels via seven-speed DSG auto gearbox

Max speed: 132mph

0-62mph: 7.8 seconds

Combined mpg: 35.1

Insurance group: 18E

CO2 emissions: 185g/km

BiK rating: 34%

Warranty: 3 years/60,000 miles