Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

LOOK AT MOI

Citroen’s C5 Aircross turns heads, fits five, rides sweetly but asks a premium

- IAIN CURRY

Organising a French festival must be the world’s easiest job. Get a few beret-wearing chaps to hold a baguette and bottle of red, then park some Citroens around for visual effect. If one is to celebrate stereotype­s, where better than a Bastille Day festival for the brand to launch its new C5 Aircross family SUV?

Citroen’s first Australian entry to the competitiv­e medium SUV segment sticks with the script. Rules state Citroens must have oddball styling and the C5 Aircross makes practicall­y all its rivals look vanilla.

With an edgy, colourful body featuring signature protective Airbumps and skinny twotiered LED front lights, the C5 embraces the brand’s vive la difference approach and aims to finally gain some traction in local sales.

We may buy their perfumes, cheeses and cakes but we just don’t buy French cars in any great number. Last year, only 232 Citroens found new owners — Australian­s bought more Ferraris.

That’s exactly how most owners like it — you won’t buy the C5 Aircross because you saw one on next-door’s driveway, you’ll buy one because nobody else has. Looks apart, there are solid reasons to consider one.

Unquestion­ably comfortabl­e to sit and ride in, roomy and versatile inside, the Citroen doesn’t skimp on specificat­ion and adds the assurance of a five-year/unlimited kilometre warranty. It won’t be cheap.

A Mazda CX-5 or Nissan X-Trail can be had in basic spec from about $30,000 but the C5 Aircross comes in “we have no entry-level” trims of Feel ($39,990 plus on-roads) and Shine for $4000 more. You pay for avant-garde tastes.

Citroen general manager of marketing Kate Gillis says the cars should be seen as “the decadent choice”.

“Essentiall­y we will rebuild the brand, be slightly non-conformist in our approach — inspired by our customers — and be truly experiment­al and innovative,” she says.

For the C5 Aircross, says product planning manager Justin Narayan, the key traits are comfort, character, modularity and practicali­ty.

“We want to offer the attractive­ness of an SUV and the interior features (of a peoplemove­r), bring something new to the market to shake up the segment, be a real Citroen.”

Sounds good but, in reality, sister brand Peugeot already does much the same with its 3008 and 5008 SUVs, especially the latter with its seven seats.

The slightly smaller C5 Aircross fits five. The Citroen cabins aren’t quite as pleasingly classy as the Peugeots but are far from dull. Buy the top-spec Shine and you score Advanced Comfort grained leather seats, with mattress-like pads giving a delightful sink-in experience. The Feel’s cloth chairs are hardly torture racks but can’t match the Shine for plushness.

A few hard plastics let down an otherwise likeable interior. Pluses are the 12.3-inch full digital instrument display, 7-inch touchscree­n with Apple CarPlay/Android Auto, satnav, 180degree parking camera, bi-zone climate control, ambient lighting and hands-free, foot-operated electric tailgate.

The Shine adds the lovely leather seats (electric for driver), wireless charge pad, acoustic glass and larger 19-inch alloys.

Standard safety kit includes autonomous emergency braking, blind spot monitor and lane departure assist — radar cruise control is a conspicuou­s omission at this price.

If you regularly transport rear passengers, the C5 Aircross excels. The three equal-width seats slide and tilt independen­tly, and can allow up to a whopping 720L of boot space, even with five passengers.

ON THE ROAD

There’s no harm in trading on past glories. Citroen’s DS (1955-75) used hydropneum­atic self-levelling suspension, turning pitted roads into liquid with pillow-soft ride comfort.

The C5 Aircross introduces a modern equivalent. Citroen has patented what it calls Progressiv­e Hydraulic Cushions in its suspension set-up (see box) and it does an impressive job of living up to the brand’s magic carpet reputation.

It’s not as markedly revolution­ary as the earlier hydropneum­atic effort but the C5 Aircross nails the brief for a plush, unfussed ride even on some shocking NSW road surfaces on launch.

Of greater relevance, it wafts along through

town and on the highway with quiet aplomb — the Shine especially with its noise-suppressin­g glass.

The suspension does a decent job of keeping body-roll in check through turns. However, the combinatio­n of its light steering, a mere 121kW from the 1.6-litre turbo and the sometimes tardy six-speed auto gearbox hardly translates to driving joy.

The four-cylinder runs out of puff on big hills and struggles to reach 100km/h in 10 seconds. Fuel economy of 7.9L/100km isn’t great, especially using pricier 95 RON fuel.

Overall it’s a harmonious drive experience and despite many hours in the plush saddle, this driver felt none the worse for wear.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia