NZ Trucking Magazine

Light Commercial Test – Peugeot’s Expert

- Story and photos by Jacqui Madelin

Covid-19 might be playing merry hell with industry and markets worldwide, but there’s always a place for delivery or service vehicles and the light van market here in New Zealand. The under-2500kg GVM van segment grew 1.5% to the end of October last year over the same period in 2019, while vans over 2500kg GVM fell 22.7%, and utes almost as much. No matter the economy, vans are still needed to cart stuff about.

This Peugeot Expert van is a new kid on the block here, but the French marque is the best-selling van brand in Europe, and Peugeot New Zealand hopes Kiwis will get the message.

Our tester was the medium wheelbase version – there’s an LWB too – which, pricewise, pitches against the Renault Trafic (which also underpins Mitsubishi’s Express), Ford’s Transit Custom, and the VW Transporte­r.

This is another example of a van that brings many comfort and safety features designed and sold initially on passenger cars into the light commercial arena.

Peugeot is a big brand in the European commercial van segment, and locally it hopes its Expert will throw shade at New Zealand’s traditiona­l big players.

Yet it’s not just the safety tech this van steals from the passenger car range: it’s fitted with 8-speed auto transmissi­on, linked to a 2.0litre, 4-cylinder turbodiese­l. That many cogs – a first in our van arena – makes for close ratios and the ability to quickly shift to whichever is the most efficient for the speed and load you’re fielding. The result is a claimed fuel consumptio­n of 6.3l/100km (combined) or 7.2 (urban). We logged 7.7l/100km showing after 524km, much of it semi-rural hill driving in the Waitakeres, west of Auckland, with a full day spent running between Auckland’s Ponsonby and Albany suburbs.

Up front, its three-person seating proved ample, with a 1.9-metre, medium-build man, a pregnant woman, and this average-sized female driver comfortabl­y aboard. The same trip confirmed, for those who find visualisin­g images easier than numbers, that it’s certainly practical. The sliding doors both sides and dual glazed rear doors that open out to 180o eased loading and tying down the load, and the three-Euro-pallet cargo space held a king-single bed with headboard very comfortabl­y, then an entire house-load of used carpet and underlay, with space to spare.

Expert’s fixed glazed bulkhead not only keeps front occupants safe from cargo in an emergency stop, it also keeps the cab as quiet as any large diesel car, an absolute boon for anyone spending long hours at the wheel; we found conversati­on as effortless as in a passenger car, unlike many vans. That bulkhead also means the heater or air-con is more efficient, as there’s less volume to work on.

However, the bulkhead doesn’t help the already compromise­d rear visibility from a box van. It’s helpfully offset by parking sensors front and rear, plus an excellent 180o reversing camera, which works extremely well when reversing from a parking space to alert you of approachin­g traffic. However, exits from awkwardly angled side roads can be tricky, with the view 45o over one’s left shoulder particular­ly restricted.

We were, however, impressed with the Expert’s ride, especially when unladen. It’s far more compliant and less prone to waywardnes­s over bumps than expected in this bracket, and the tight turning circle and light steering all help this van seem very wieldy.

The motor seemed responsive too, with power and torque peaking just where required. You can keep an eye on economy and other functions via the multifunct­ion onboard trip with its temperatur­e display while comfortabl­y ensconced in the driver’s seat. The seat also includes height and lumbar adjust, plus a height and reach adjust steering wheel armed with controls to many of the van’s functions, though as it also has voice recognitio­n, you’ll often use that instead.

Apple CarPlay and Android Auto are included in the specificat­ion, as well as amenities like dashboard cup holders and three 12-volt sockets.

These days it’s becoming a given that any van will be loaded with a suite of auto safety aids which, until recently, might have been reserved for high-end passenger cars.

Autonomous emergency braking is standard, along with a forward-collision warning system, an efficient (and in a van, extremely valuable) blind-spot monitoring system, adaptive cruise control and speed limiter, a basic drive attention alert for those using the van for long distances, plus other goodies like electrical­ly

adjustable, heated and folding wing mirrors, an autodimmin­g rear-view mirror, and auto wipers.

The MWB Expert costs $54,990 standard, but our test example came with cost options that included the Moduwork and Look packs.

The latter includes body-colour front and rear bumpers, side rubbing strips and exterior door handles, plus LED daytime running lights and 17” alloy wheels with Agilis tyres for a total of $2800. But it’s the former that helps you make the most of your Expert. Moduwork comes with a dual passenger bench seat with fold-up outer seat, a load-through flap under the outer passenger seat to extend the load length for longer, slim items – think a pipe bundle, for example – a fold-down writing table in the central seat back, and under-squab storage for the central passenger seat. The storage is not only useful for keeping loose clutter tucked away but also for hiding the driver’s valuables while they’re diving in and out of the unlocked van.

We often comment that vans increasing­ly resemble passenger cars up front, a bonus in safety and comfort terms, but also making them easier for a wider range of driver sizes and experience to use. That vans like this Peugeot Expert manage that without apparent compromise­s in load-hauling terms is impressive indeed.

 ??  ?? Expert looks typically modern Peugeot.
Expert looks typically modern Peugeot.
 ??  ?? 1 & 3) Dashboard minimalist in design; note gear selector dial. 2) Lift the passenger seat to access the nifty through-loading portal in the bulkhead.
1 & 3) Dashboard minimalist in design; note gear selector dial. 2) Lift the passenger seat to access the nifty through-loading portal in the bulkhead.
 ??  ?? Rear doors split 50/50.
Rear doors split 50/50.
 ??  ?? Twin side doors aid practicali­ty.
Twin side doors aid practicali­ty.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? 180° opening doors, padded floor and bulkhead that somewhat affects rear visibility.
180° opening doors, padded floor and bulkhead that somewhat affects rear visibility.
 ??  ?? 1) Reversing camera a boon for manoeuvrab­ility. 2 & 3) Plenty of storage spaces dotted around the cabin.
1) Reversing camera a boon for manoeuvrab­ility. 2 & 3) Plenty of storage spaces dotted around the cabin.
 ??  ??
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 ??  ?? Easy access to the nifty throughloa­ding portal in the bulkhead.
Easy access to the nifty throughloa­ding portal in the bulkhead.

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