The Citizen (Gauteng)

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.

- Andre de Kock

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.

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