Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

TOY 4WD THAT’S THE REAL DEAL

Off-road or in the sand, the Jimny shines — just don’t crash or expect refinement

- BILL McKINNON

At last count, 36 small SUVs were competing for your love and money. If, however, you’re after a small 4WD — as in something with real rather than pretend off-road ability — your choices are few. Actually, less than few. Only two qualify for fair dinkum 4WD status.

Jeep’s Renegade Trailhawk, loaded with clever 4WD tech, will get you off the bitumen in style. Nobody’s buying it because $40,290 is a too ambitious an ask for a small wagon.

The 2019 Suzuki Jimny, in comparison, is simple, tough and cheap — keeping faith with its predecesso­rs in a model line that stretches back almost 50 years.

VALUE

Priced from $23,990, the Jimny looks too cute and toylike to take seriously but it’s the real 4WD deal.

It runs similar heavy duty hardware to the ultimate hardcore off-roader, Toyota’s 70 Series LandCruise­r: separate body-on-frame constructi­on, part-time 4WD, dual-range transfer case with manual rather than electronic selection and live axles at both ends, albeit sprung with coils rather than the big Toyota’s leaves.

Olde worlde mechanical­s are overlaid with 21st-century tech, including hill descent control, hill holding and a traction controlact­ivated limited-slip differenti­al function that works diagonally across both axles.

A 1.5-litre petrol four-cylinder with a fivespeed manual (tested here), is standard. A fourspeed automatic adds $2000.

The Jimny’s equipment list is about as short as they come apart from infotainme­nt, which includes a seven-inch dashtop touchscree­n, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto, stand-alone navigation and responsive voice control.

COMFORT

A short, tall, skinny box engineered to impersonat­e a mountain goat is never going to be the last word in serenity or luxury.

The Suzuki, though, is surprising­ly comfortabl­e, in part because its lack of fat (it weighs just 1090kg) means it can get away with relatively pliant springs. Bitumen-biased 165/80 Bridgeston­e Duelers on 15-inch alloys also put a lot of air and rubber between you and the bumps.

Sure, it’s fussy and firm, but I’ve tested a few cars — and a lot of utes — that are less comfortabl­e than the Jimny.

Engine noise is intrusive at freeway speeds. Turning up the volume on the tinny twospeaker audio just adds to the racket.

The back seat is torture for adults. With all seats up, there is next to zero usable boot space; fold the seat backs to yield a hatch-sized load area, lined in durable grey plastic as befits Jimny’s get-it-dirty brief.

A full-size spare hangs from the light, onepiece, side-hinged tailgate.

SAFETY

The Jimny’s three-star crash rating is a worry when you dig into the details. According to ANCAP, the cabin “lost structural integrity” in the 64km/h frontal offset crash, the airbag failed to prevent the driver’s head hitting the steering wheel and chest protection was rated as “weak.” Passengers don’t fare well, either.

DRIVING

Minimal mass and short gearing allow the 1.5 to shift the Jimny along at a reasonable rate around town, as long as you keep busy with the light, precise gearbox.

It’s sluggish below 3000rpm, which correspond­s to 100km/h in fifth, so the Suzuki can hold its own on the open road. Expect 67L/100km on the highway, and 7-9L in town, on regular unleaded.

The old Jimny and Sierra were a couple of the most terrifying cars I’ve tested. Their response to being pointed at a corner was to roll over, eliciting an assortment of oaths and requiring immediate, vigorous corrective action at the wheel.

The Jimny’s dimensiona­l DNA still makes it inherently twitchy in quick changes of direction, now compensate­d for — in part — by indirect steering, plus stability control as a safety net.

It is still a handful, even in a straight line, on rough, corrugated dirt roads, where the live axle suspension often loses control, especially at the rear, which can threaten to swap places with the front. Front discs and rear drum brakes lack power and are wooden in feel.

I didn’t take it to the beach but the Suzuki would work brilliantl­y on sand, where weight is your enemy. In low-range, the 1.5 can drag it up all but the steepest inclines without needing to be thrashed.

Steep clearance angles mean the Suzuki can crawl across gnarly terrain with the big boys. You have to be careful not to drop a wheel — or two — into a Jimny-sized hole or drop-off, otherwise you might find yourself upside down.

All-terrain tyres would extend its off-road capability far beyond the standard rubber’s modest limits.

HEART SAYS

I want a car with that elusive, designer-driven, feel-good factor but I can’t afford a Mini or a Mustang. I love the Suzuki’s retro simplicity. I’ll probably never take it off-road. Who cares?

HEAD SAYS

I want something that’s cheap and fun, with serious off-road chops. What else is there?

ALTERNATIV­ES JEEP RENEGADE TRAILHAWK FROM $40,290

Jeep has cut prices on the Renegade since its 2015 launch but it’s still expensive. That said, it’s also much more sophistica­ted, comfortabl­e and spacious than the Jimny. 130kW 2.4-litre/ninespeed auto/dual-range.

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