Times Colonist

Luxe SUV joins a very busy field

- CHARLES FLEMING

How I pity the luxury SUV shopper.

The market is flooded with well-designed, wellbuilt, upscale cars. Between the options offered by BMW, Audi, Lexus, Acura, Porsche, Mercedes-Benz and others, every aspiration­al car company has a suitable SUV for sale.

On the lower end, Volkswagen and Subaru are getting ready to present new SUVs. On the high end, Bentley now offers the Bentayga, Alfa Romeo has the Stelvio and even Lamborghin­i is prepping its Urus SUV for a late 2017 debut.

They’re all so good that figuring out which are better or the best is really a question of personal taste.

Jaguar is the latest to jump in with its take on the suburban people mover. And it’s a contender.

The 2017 F-Pace lands somewhere in the middle of the pack. Neither the priciest nor the highestper­forming, it’s a good combinatio­n of good looks, luxury comfort and cargo capacity.

Outfitted with all-wheel drive, and driven through an eight-speed automatic transmissi­on by a 3.0-litre supercharg­ed V-6 engine, the F-Pace sets a pace around town. Nimble and quick, it feels smaller and lighter than it looks — or than its broad, roomy interior would suggest.

The engine, which makes 380 horsepower and 332 pound feet of torque, feels powerful and responsive, and when pushed delivers a sports-car exhaust note.

The all-wheel-drive system, and its adaptive dynamics, torque vectoring and agile suspension, manage cornering well. The “dynamic” drive mode kicks up the torque and tightens the handling.

But it’s also very comfortabl­e, and loaded with luxury features that might have driven the MSRP higher.

Headroom and legroom, front and rear, are class-leading. (One passenger declared the back seat had more room than any SUV she’d ever ridden in.) The rear seats also have their own device plug-ins and climate control.

The F-Pace offers the requisite cargo space, too. With the rear seats folded flat, the car could accommodat­e a half-dozen golf bags, a suite of snowboards or a brace of mountain bikes.

Its manufactur­ers put the towing capacity at 2,400 kilograms, enough to haul a lightweigh­t camper, trailer or boat.

Standard features include 14-way adjustable heated seats, heated steering wheel, keyless entry and ignition and 20-inch wheels, plus helpful driver assists like rain-sensing windshield wipers, lanedepart­ure monitor, blind spot monitor and rearview camera.

(Options included on the model I drove were heated rear seats, a tailgate that opened with the wave of my hand, upgraded instrument screen and sound system, and a heads-up windshield display.)

Also standard are a couple of amenities whose appeal is hard to determine. At night, a bright circle of light, reading “Jaguar,” appears below the doors. Also, the dial used for gear selection retracts into the centre console when the engine is turned off. That’s cute, but … why?

Jaguar calls the F-Pace “the ultimate practical Jaguar sports car,” which seems to include a lot of qualifiers.

In design, it is sportier than sister company Land Rover’s off-road-ready vehicles, but more rugged than Jaguar’s XE or XF sports cars — with which it shares engines and architectu­re.

Some consumers will worry whether it also shares quality-control issues with past Jaguars, which suffered from what some wags call British Car Disease.

The current ownership by Indian automotive giant Tata has made several good-faith efforts to combat that. Last year, the company began an aggressive campaign to include more upscale features in base models of its cars, without raising the prices.

Despite the daunting competitio­n, Jaguar has already done well with the F-Pace. A Jaguar representa­tive said its sales doubled last year and largely credited this vehicle, which became Jaguar’s No. 1 model the first month it was offered, selling more units in June 2016 than the total number of all cars Jaguar sold in that entire month the previous year.

For 2016, more than one-third of all Jaguars sold were F-Paces, though it didn’t make its debut until June.

Jaguar said it has seen no loss of sales from other models, which means the F-Pace may be taking buyers from Audi’s Q5, BMW’s X3 and X4, or Mercedes-Benz’s GLC.

The MSRP probably helps. While the higher trim S class F-Pace starts at $58,695, an F-Pace with a smaller engine and fewer amenities can go for as little as $42,985. That’s competitiv­e with the Audi and BMW equivalent­s, if a little more than a stripped GLC, but a lot less than a Porsche Macan.

Wintry weather conditions may help 2017 sales. The ongoing onslaught of rain and snow along the West Coast could persuade some car shoppers that they need a four-wheel- or all-wheel-drive vehicle just to get around town.

If so, the F-Pace makes a good choice.

 ?? JAGUAR ?? The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace has a good combinatio­n of good looks, luxury comfort and cargo capacity.
JAGUAR The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace has a good combinatio­n of good looks, luxury comfort and cargo capacity.
 ??  ?? The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace is nimble and quick, feeling smaller and lighter than it looks —- or than its broad, roomy interior would suggest.
The 2017 Jaguar F-Pace is nimble and quick, feeling smaller and lighter than it looks —- or than its broad, roomy interior would suggest.

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