The Citizen (Gauteng)

Sensible Vigus 4x4 Diesel

BACK TO BASICS: AFFORDABLE AND WITH ALL THE IMPORTANT AND SENSIBLE CAPABILITI­ES

- André de Kock

This vehicle doesn’t compromise performanc­e for its low price.

Remember the movie Gandhi? Produced by Sir Richard Attenborou­gh and starring Ben Kingsley, it was a massive production with more than 3 000 actors and extras, a budget of over R300 million and a wide range of internatio­nally diverse locations.

It took more than three years to produce and the finished product ran for longer than three hours in theatres.

So, you would think they could find five minutes, somewhere, for a car chase.

But no, that was too much to ask, and audiences had to live with the compromise­d end result.

Yet, Gandhi was met with wide acclaim, bagging various Oscars and rewarding its investors lavishly by earning over R1,4 billion at the box office.

Shows you – compromise is not always a bad thing.

So it is too with the JMC Vigus bakkie.

In the highly competitiv­e South African bakkie market, which overflows with technologi­cally advanced, extremely expensive variants, the Vigus unapologet­ically offers various Back to Basics products at very affordable prices.

We sampled the Vigus Single Cab 4x4 Luxury Diesel model which, at R299 990, costs substantia­lly less than any other local vehicle with one-ton carrying ability and all-wheel drive capability.

The question is, of course, whether the Vigus’ low price brings with it an unacceptab­le number of compromise­s. We think not. For one thing, it is a handsome vehicle, with its slant-eyed frontal area setting it part from any other local one-tonner.

It is a large bakkie – 5.325 m long, 1.815 m high and 1.570 m wide, with wheelbase of 3.085 m.

That gives it a turning circle of 6.7 metres, which makes it rather cumbersome to manoeuvre in tight spaces.

But, it does boast reverse radar. This thankfully saved me from reversing the bakkie into an expensive race car in the Zwartkops Raceway paddock – an event that might have strained my current friendly relationsh­ip with its owner.

He holds his race car in high regard, and me thumping it with a commercial vehicle would have realised his worst apprehensi­ons about motoring writers. I digress – back to the Vigus. Its four-cylinder, naturally aspirated 2.4-litre diesel engine produces 90 kW of power at around 4 000 rpm and 290 Nm of torque between 1 500 rpm and 2 600 rpm. It weighs in at 2 790 kg. None of which makes the Vigus a high performanc­e vehicle, but its accelerati­on was more than adequate for normal Gauteng traffic conditions, while it would effortless­ly cruise in top gear at 120 km/h with 2 300 rpm on the clock.

The torque makes it special – it starts coming into effect from just over 1 200 rpm and increases seamlessly, to give the Vigus proper overtaking grunt in the top three gears.

The five-speed manual gearbox worked smoothly, with the cogs easily falling into place, going up or down.

We did not find the need to engage the all-wheel drive system, but it works electronic­ally, with a console-mounted switch allowing one the choices of 2H, 4H and 4L.

We figure that most Vigus owners would find few circumstan­ces that actually demand the vehicle to clamber up slippery or rocky inclines.

However, the vehicle does everything else competentl­y, and the all-wheel drive system should be no different.

Brakes are discs front and drums rear, with ABS and EBD, all of which worked just fine to arrest the rather heavy vehicle’s speed when needed.

The load bay is huge and rubber-coated, with a roll bar plus robust grappling hooks on the side.

The whole package sits on 16inch aluminium alloy wheels in 265/70R16 rubber, with large sidesteps next to the cabin adding to the looks.

The interior does not boast a computer, Bluetooth or a GPS navigation­al system. But it does have two comfortabl­e, cloth covered seats with four-directiona­l adjustment, a radio, a MP3 system with USB playback ability, a CD player, power windows, an air conditione­r and airbags for both occupants.

Vigus say it will seat three, but that is not the case. Taking two friends from Alberton to Zwartkops we tried it, but the two friends decided they never intended to get that close, and one ended in the load bay.

We never tried to drive the bakkie economical­ly, and it returned a surprising­ly good overall diesel consumptio­n of 8.2l/100km.

We think the Vigus is a sensible alternativ­e to other, more expensive local bakkies.

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