Stylish trip that lacks real zip
PEUGEOT 108: PRETTY LITTLE CITY CAR LIGHT ON FUEL Three-cylinder, 998cc engine renders 53kW of power at 6 000rpm.
This writer hates and fears computers. For good reason – because computers hate me. When I really, really need a computer to do something for me, five minutes before a final deadline, it will not. Programmes that work perfectly fine for other people, seize up like old twostroke engines when I attempt to utilise them.
When I really, really need a vital image or story on an incoming e-mail, it will quietly disappear forever, ignoring the sender’s repeated attempts to transmit it to me.
When I send a really important e-mail, it will disappear into a black hole in the stratosphere.
When satellites from outer space reenter the earth’s atmosphere they burn up – because they hit my millions of aborted e-mail communication attempts.
I feel guilty about that. One day, a computer will kill me. I know it. The computers know it. The computers know that I know it.
They also know that I do not know when it will happen. Thus, I am fearful of cars with an abundance of computer-controlled functions. Which is why I warmed to the Peugeot 108 on its arrival.
It is, you see, small, and does not boast any autonomous self-driving systems that would surely conspire to grievously harm me.
It is also pretty – Peugeot call it “a sophisticated urban design replete with dynamic lines and meticulous details”. We do not understand stuff like that, but it is good-looking.
Features we liked were the chunky bonnet, prominent lion emblem, unmistakable Peugeot headlamps with LED daytime running lights and three-claw design rear light clusters.
It is compact, at 3.47m long, 1.62m wide and 1.46m high, with small front and rear overhangs and sits on 14-inch steel wheels in 165/65 R14 rubberware.
Sadly, that is complemented by one of those much hated “space saver” spare wheels – guaranteed to ruin your entire day, should you suffer a puncture on a long trip.
Inside, it offers height and depth adjustable front seats, an air conditioner, central locking, electric front windows, a multi-function steering wheel, a two-speaker radio with USB, AUX and a 12V socket.
Not unusual, but, being French, the little Peugeot brings all of it together with comfort and style.
The various controls are all within easy reach, while the speedometer housing is covered by a cowling to ensure clarity of the analogue speedometer and an LCD screen.
You can also, they say, connect the car’s centre touchscreen with your smartphone via Bluetooth or mirror screen.
Safety features abound, with ABS (anti-lock braking system), ESP (electronic stability control), EBD (electronic brakeforce distribution), emergency brake assist, front, side and curtain airbags, plus an anti-theft alarm system.
Which brings us, almost sadly, to the actual driving part.
The Peugeot 108 is fitted with a three-cylinder, 998cc, petrol engine that renders 53kW of power at 6 000rpm and 93Nm of torque at 4 400rpm.
This goes to the front wheels via a five-speed manual gearbox.
The combination conspires to make the 108 slow – really slow.
Acceleration is sluggish, even if you coax the little engine over 5 000rpm – which it does not like.
Peugeot reckons the 108 will go from standstill to 100km/h in just over 13 sec, with a top speed of 160km/h. We doubt the first figure and flatly disbelieve the second.
At a push, the car will keep up with Gauteng traffic, but once on the highway, you find the fifth gear virtually inoperable.
At 120km/h, the slightest hint of an incline will immediately drop your speed below 100km/h and you have to spend a long time with your foot flat in fourth gear to regain the legal limit.
The speed of 160km/h will only occur if the car should fall down a mineshaft.
That said, the 108 is nimble, with a turning circle of just 4.8m. It is easy to park and the electric power steering feels weighted just right in corners.
Given an extra cylinder, 200cc more and a 30kW power injection, it would be great to drive. But, the 108 was never aimed at fat old motorsports enthusiasts.
Its target market of young school-leavers or old grannies will probably never notice its sluggishness, focusing rather on its style, comfort and fuel consumption of around 6l/100km.