Evo India

VOLVO S60 POLESTAR

When was the last time you drove a fast Volvo?

- Anand Mohan (@patracaar)

AA FAST VOLVO? I have no memories of the S80 V8. It was a rare car and I hear it was fast, but going by how the non-V8 S80 handled from my memories of a few years ago, you couldn’t call it a driver’s car. Eight cylinders became six and I’ll give you a cookie if you find me an S60 T6. That was a rare breed too. When the T6 faded out, came the Drive-E four cylinder engines. New powertrain­s that were cutting edge, smooth and refined but far from fast. Every new Volvo has them, and in the peak of their performanc­e, they can be found in the XC90 T8 with a supercharg­er and a turbocharg­er bolted on. It’s a heavy breather and also gets an electric motor to push out about 400 horsepower. This beautifull­y blue S60 Polestar houses a close relative of this engine. And we had a few hot laps in the ‘mad’ Volvo at the Kari Speedway. How did it all go?

Get the gear selector into Drive, yank it left to engage Sport mode and turn the ESC off. Good lord, in a Volvo! I’m already starting to like the influence of Polestar on the guys who always play safe, not fast. So ESC off is important because Volvos are famously electronic­ally restrained cars. Once you get that done, you can engage Sport Plus too with a long procedure that involves a sequence of paddle shift movements, but it’s best to avoid it. Sport is good. Once there, drive the S60 Polestar out of the pits and a long nice supercharg­er whine will surprise you as you get

on the gas. The S60 Polestar comes across instantly as a quick car. It builds speed well and just as you are through with the first gear into turn one, you have got to brake for the next sequence of corners.

The S60 Polestar gets a Borg Warner Haldex all-wheel drive system with a slight rear bias when you are throttling out while exiting corners. It’s enough to indicate a push over a pull. But go aggressive over the steering and get the S60’s weight to its sides and you will notice the weight of the car making it understeer. The trick is to be gentle on the throttle till you make the corner and power out as you bleed in to the exit. Slow in fast out is the oldest trick in the book for a fast lap around a racetrack. You have got to stick to that rule in the S60 Polestar and stay away from being too aggressive on the throttle.

That said, the grip from the Michelin Pilot Sport 245/35 ZR20 tyres is simply superb, and the mega 370mm front Brembos and 302mm rear discs can shed speed well. The S60 however dives in under heavy braking. That I suppose can be curbed by making the suspension stiffer. The cars on the track seemed to be set up a little softer than I would have liked, keeping in mind the bumpy surface of the Kari Speedway and the big media contingent driving the cars with varying track experience levels. It would do with a stiffer setting for the suspension but that isn’t easy.

Unlike dynamic dampers which can be adjusted with an electronic switch on the centre console, the S60 Polestar goes old school. The Öhlins dampers are manually adjustable, which could be cumbersome, but if you want to get it just right, there’s no better way since it can be adjusted up to ten counts. Are Volvo drivers that focused though is the question. Would someone jack up the front of the car, change the front damping settings, go to the boot to flip open the rear seats, get under the insulation material and adjust the rear dampers, and just in case one didn’t get it right, do the whole procedure again? I would grudgingly, just because I rate ride quality over everything else, but I’m not sure everyone would.

I think this is a big plus point for the car. How cool is it that you can poke around a car and adjust suspension settings for yourself, go drive it, adjust it some more, test it again, make it just perfect as per your own likes? This is like a race or rally car – tuned to your taste. I think it is a plus point, not a negative. Other cars have Sport, Sport+, this is really cool!

Polestar takes their cars very seriously, maybe a little too much for halfway enthusiast­s. An S60 Polestar is for someone who wants a daily driver that can go fast once in a while.

A daily driver can’t be set up stiff and every time you want to carve a few corners, you have got to be set it up first manually. That may be too much of an effort for some. Neverthele­ss, there’s plenty more besides the suspension set up that you’d like. Pop the bonnet and a carbonfibr­e strut brace boasts of the S60’s tight body control, the chassis itself is 80 per cent stiffer, the front seats are the best pair of buckets you will find in a sedan of this price and the Alcantara-lined seats and steering wheel feel quite special.

The S60 Polestar has a strong engine that does 0-100kmph in a claimed 4.7 seconds and will get to 250kmph on a long enough straight. The power delivery from the supercharg­ed and turbocharg­ed in-line four-cylinder Drive-E engine is robust in the mid-range and delivers a healthy dose of power all the way to 6000rpm. If you stay pinned, it will redline at 7000rpm and even

In Sport Plus with the active exhausts working, you get a nice burble at an upshift

hold gear. So yes, the S60 Polestar is quick, and in Sport Plus with the active exhaust working what you get is a nice burble at an upshift. The S60 however lacks the connect you get in some of the other sportscars, things like feedback from the steering, the precision at turn in or the pressure through the pedals.

On the styling front, the S60 Polestar gets interestin­g aero bits like a front splitter, a rear bootlip spoiler and a rear diffuser. Compared to the base S60, the front splitter and rear spoiler contribute to an extra 54kg of downforce at max speed. It has got beautiful 20-inch wheels too, and it all looks fantastic with the unique Rebel Blue paint.

The S60 Polestar is a fast car but lacks the involvemen­t that you get in a C 43 AMG. The latter feels more balanced and lighter in direction changes, so in that sense, if you have to buy a car that has more agility, it’s the C 43 AMG all the way. But when you weigh in the price, which at `52.5 lakh, ex-showroom Delhi (it is `21.8 lakh cheaper than a C 43 AMG and `13.7 lakh cheaper than the Audi S5 Sportback) is an absolute steal for a sport sedan, the S60 Polestar makes a strong case for itself. It’s for the discerning car buyer who wants a dollop of performanc­e every once in a while but doesn’t want to break the bank for it. ⌧

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 1: Sticky Michelin 245/35 ZR20s and AWD give the S60 Polestar immense grip. 2&3: Polestar branding and material finished differentl­y inside the cabin. 4: Active exhaust sounds great in Sport Plus mode
1
1: Sticky Michelin 245/35 ZR20s and AWD give the S60 Polestar immense grip. 2&3: Polestar branding and material finished differentl­y inside the cabin. 4: Active exhaust sounds great in Sport Plus mode 1

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India