Forester King of the Road

Subaru Forester

By Bill McCarthy

YOU can almost feel yourself yearning for a return of the Beast from the East when you climb into a Subaru Forester, writes Bill McCarthy.

Subaru is renowned for its off-road, four wheel drive capability and the Forester is first among equals on that score. Long seen as virtually indestructible.

But the snow didn’t come, so putting the four wheel drive capability to the test in the ice and snow never came to pass.

So no chance to try out the X-Mode with hill descent control, which, when activated, takes command of the engine, transmission, symmetrical all-wheel drive, brakes, and other components to provide the best traction and grip in difficult conditions.

In addition, hill descent moderates speed and braking for you when going downhill, allowing you to concentrate on steering.

So, a full-fat offroader with the aerodynamics of a London Routemaster bus, but the vehicle has real road presence.

Not only for its still robust and boxy shape, despite tweaks to the styling but also the fact that you don’t see too many of them on the road in the UK, although they sell plenty worldwide. So it provokes curiosity.

Now in its fourth generation it is slightly more aerodynamic than predecessors with more of an SUV type presence, with neat alloys, smart light clusters and integrated roof bars.

Powered by a 150bhp petrol engine on this model performance is hardly startling, but definitely adequate and it offers excellent torque to deliver good towing capability and for the all-important off-road challenges.

Drive is via the Lineatronic variable transmission, which is pretty smooth, but it still takes around 11 second to hit 60mph and it can get noisy under hard acceleration.

For a more engaging drive, there is a sport option through the SI-Drive selector, switching to sport sharpens things up, while paddles can be used for gear selection, something I found pretty superfluous to be honest.

Slight criticisms are the vague steering and lumpy ride at times, but it is packed with equipment at a competitive price.

Loyal Subaru owners will love the high-riding set up, commanding driving position and huge glass areas to offer good all round vision and allows plenty of light into the cabin.

Inside, the Forester uses improved quality materials and plastics, giving a robust feeling, intuitive dash layout and a big central touchscreen. The dash is well laid out with logical controls and switchgear.

The infotainment system lets you make phone calls and set the navigation via the touchscreen, steering wheel controls, or the voice control system. It’s easy to connect your smartphone or other mobile music device via the USB or standard AUX jack.

Car manufacturers like to offer something special. In this case, not a brolly or ice scraper a la Skoda, but sun visors which offer a slidable extension. Ten out of 10 for whoever at Subaru hought of that, such an aid for so little cost.

For safety, all Foresters incorporate EyeSight technology which delivers includes automatic pre-collision braking, lane departure warning, sway warning and adaptive cruise control.

Practicality is excellent with the split rear seats offering plenty of stowage space, 550 litres with the seats in situ, rising to 1,573 when folded.

Factfile

Subaru Forester 2.0i XE Premium Lineatronic

Price: £31,495

Mechanical: 148bhp, 1,995cc, 4cyl petrol engine driving four wheels via Lineatronic automatic gearbox

Max Speed: 119mph

0-62mph: 11.8 seconds

Combined MPG: 43.5

Insurance Group: 16

C02 emissions: 150g/km

Warranty: 3yrs/60,000 miles

Evalia’s electric performance

Nissan Evalia

By Bill McCarthy

NISSAN continues to make great strikes in the electric vehicle sector with both latest Leaf and the new e-NV200.

Cargo carrier, taxi, airport runabout or family people carrier, as electric powered vehicles become more prevalent, the firm’s electric van/MPV now offers something a little bit extra.

The technology is moving on at pace with battery range, in the early days, at around 80-100 miles, substantially increased.

Now Nissan’s advanced battery takes up the same amount of space as its predecessor but gives drivers more than 60 per cent extra range on a single charge without affecting load capacity.

The upgraded Nissan e-NV200: The LCV market game changer. Zero-emissions van, now goes further than ever on a single charge

The new 40kWh unit, replacing the 24kWh battery, increases the range to between 130 and 180 miles, depending on how you drive and the electrical supply demands from the vehicle.

In addition it is one of the first vehicles to be tested to the new real world driving WLTP efficiency standard with a combined range of 124 miles.

Obviously this can be extended with cautious city driving, but put your foot down, get the wipers, lights and air con going and the range goes off a cliff edge.

Essentially a light commercial, this Evalia model is a five or seven-seat people carrier or MPV style vehicle, offering spacious seating for all occupants. For a van, it looks pretty sleek as well with 15-inch alloy wheels and body coloured door mirrors and bumpers.

In this seven-seater, all are seated comfortably, in the two-three-two formation although the rear pair are tighter. In addition the seats can be removed or shifted into various combinations to accommodate all sorts of shapes of loads, suitcases or tools.

Access is via a large tailgate and as well as two sliding doors allowing access to the middle and rear set of seats. For extra practicality, there are various pockets, cubby holes and drink holders throughout the cabin.

On the road, the vehicle has tremendous speed off the mark as the battery delivers instant torque, while the single shift transmission means its as smooth as silk. It can hit 60mph in under nine seconds.

There are two drive modes, economy and power, which speak for themselves but shift the gear into B mode and this effectively brakes the car when you take your foot off the accelerator and regenerates energy back to the battery.

Not a great drive, except in congested conditions.

It is pretty near silent with little vibration or engine noise and with only wind or tyre noise intruding into the cabin.

It is easy to manoeuvre, with light steering and a brilliant turning circle, aided by the fact there is no transmission in the way.

Like the Leaf EV, it is well equipped with colour reversing camera for easy low-speed manoeuvring, Bluetooth connectivity, Intelligent Key and a new and improved fully integrated navigation system.

The layout is car-like, with power indicator and range rather than fuel gauge, plus various indicators of how you are driving and power consumption.

Instrumentation is logically laid out and the interior itself feels well built and airy, even if the hard plastic finish seem a bit dated for a motor costing over £30,000.

The NissanConnect EV app helps drivers organise their day and trips. Controlled from smartphone, tablet or computer, it allows owners to track and log driver reports digitally. They can check information on the battery charge level, start the battery charging and set the vehicle’s climate control remotely.

Charging can be done in three ways. Up to 80 per cent at a fast charger at a service station, in towns or one of the growing number of sites throughout the country, takes takes 40 to 60 minutes, while it’s around 7.5 hours to 100 per cent with a 7Kw wallbox.

It can take up to 21 hours with the standard domestic plug, so the wallbox, makes sense.

Factfile

Nissan e-NV200 Combi Plus 7 Seater Evalia

Price: £30,595 exc VAT

Mechanical: 108ps electric motor driving front wheels via CVT gearbox

Max Speed: 76mph

0-62mph: 8.9 seconds

Combined MPG: 180 miles

Insurance Group: 12

C02 emissions: 0g/km

Warranty: 3yrs/100,000 miles

The upgraded Nissan e-NV200: The LCV market game changer. Zero-emissions van, now goes further than ever on a single charge

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