The Southland Times

Skoda Scouts out the Superb

Damien O’Carroll says Skoda’s Superb Scout is perfect for people who need an SUV, but don’t want one.

- So does that massive [SARCASM] increase in ride height affect the handling? 2.0-litre four-cylinder turbopetro­l, 200kW/350Nm, 7-speed automatic, AWD, combined economy 8.1L/100km (WLTP), CO2 180g/km (source: Skoda). Vital statistics: 4862mm long, 1477mm hi

smoother and refined at urban speeds.

Sure, there are still a few small traditiona­l DSG foibles, but they are so massively smoothed over these days as to be barely noticeable anymore – the slight hesitation on hills is the most noticeable thing, but a slight hesitation is light years away from the time I got a last-gen Superb stuck on my own (admittedly steep) driveway because its DSG transmissi­on got utterly flummoxed while I was slowly manoeuvrin­g around another car and simply sat there gently vibrating . . .

The new transmissi­on is hooked up to a revised version of the most powerful engine in the Superb range – a 200kW/350Nm 2.0-litre turbo four-cylinder petrol unit that is as wonderfull­y slick and refined as the transmissi­on. Around town the two operate in an effortless­ly seamless fashion, but it is out on the open road where things become truly effortless – the diesel-like torque peaks at just 2000rpm and hangs around at that peak until 5400rpm, meaning accelerati­on is strongly insistent right across that range.

Nope, but then even the Sportline focuses way more on comfort than razor-sharp handling and is far from being the most dynamic thing in Skoda’s lineup anyway.

But what the Superb Scout is is simply incredibly comfortabl­e. It lopes along the open road with a cosseting grace to its ride, surfing that fat torque curve to effortless­ly (there’s that word again) cover distances both small and large.

The leather and Alcantara seats are comfortabl­y supportive and offer up an excellent driving position, while the interior itself is wonderfull­y well laid out, beautifull­y built and made from impressive­ly high-quality materials. Seriously, if Skoda up their interior game much further it won’t simply be a case of asking ‘‘why would you buy a VW?’’, you will have to start questionin­g the value of Audi ownership . . .

You’re kidding, right? It is literally the car that defined that statement and continues to do so.

Of course it comes with all the clever little features that Skoda prides itself on – the umbrella in the door, the removable boot light/ torch, the ice scraper secreted in the fuel filler door and all – but one of the Superb’s cleverest tricks is all that remarkable interior space.

And it isn’t just the utterly massive boot or the incredible rear leg room either – the sense of space around the front seat passengers adds massively to the feeling that the Superb is a high-end luxury car playing at being something far more egalitaria­n. Which is undoubtedl­y its cleverest trick of all.

While the Superb Scout’s SUVbaiting styling suggests a wide pool of possible competitor­s in both the SUV and wagon segments, let’s just focus on other raised-up SUV-lite style wagons, shall we?

The expansion of parentcomp­any Volkswagen’s SUV lineup has seen the demise of the Passat Alltrack in New Zealand, but there is still the Audi A6 Allroad in the in-house competitio­n. Except it costs a LOT more ($134,900) than the Superb Scout, although it does come with a 257kW 3.0-litre V6.

Likewise Volvo’s stunningly sexy V90 Cross Country is more expensive at $98,900 and offers a less-powerful, but torquier 173kW/ 480Nm 2.0-litre diesel four-cylinder engine.

Closer to the Skoda’s price is the cheaper ($59,990) Subaru Outback 3.6, with its 191kW/350Nm horizontal­ly-opposed six, while the soon-to-be-deceased Holden Commodore Tourer is even less SUV-like and, at $67,490, more expensive, but does pack a 235kW/ 381Nm 3.6-litre V6.

None, however, match the Superb Scout’s huge interior space and sheer value for money.

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