The Citizen (KZN)

Nothing prehistori­c here

SAFETY FIRST BUT THIS SUV IS GOOD-LOOKING AND HAS ENOUGH OOMPH Abundance of electronic nannies shield the driver, which does not add to a hands-on feeling.

- Andre de Kock

This writer sometimes dabbles into scientific research, coming up with different findings than those of experts whose views are generally accepted as gospel.

Take the Tyrannosau­rus Rex, for instance. Palaeontol­ogists tell us this species of dinosaur was the most aggressive of all animals, ever.

Unlike other flesh-eating dinosaurs, who would kill in order to feed themselves or when their lives or those of their offspring were threatened, the T-Rex would attack whatever other living being it happened upon.

Weighing in at around 10 000kg, the T-Rex was by no means the largest breed around, but that did not stop it from immediatel­y fighting much bigger creatures to the death.

The experts say this was due to the T-Rex’s environmen­tal movements – it travelled long distances and would always try to forcefully establish its own living area wherever it went. They are, of course, wrong. Look at a picture of the T-Rex and notice those ridiculous little arms. There is your explanatio­n. Anything that lives to be 400 years old without being able to scratch its ass even once has the right to be in a perpetual bad mood.

That is my take on the subject and I stick by it.

We, and palaeontol­ogists throughout the world, have agreed to disagree on the matter.

Other things, generally taken as fact, are also not necessaril­y correct.

For instance, many motorists believe people buy Volvos because they are the safest cars around. Not so. These days, there are many other reasons for buying a Volvo.

Take the new Volvo XC40, for instance.

For a start, it is visually appealing, looking somewhat like a XC90 that has shrunk in the wash.

At 4 425mm long, 2 034mm wide and 1 652mm high it is chunky, purposeful and solid in appearance.

It sits 221mm high to indicate off-roading ability and the test vehicle sported beautiful 19-inch, diamond-cut five-spoke alloy wheels in low-profile rubber.

Adding much to its presence, the vehicle comes with Volvo’s unique T-shaped front-lighting signature, plus high-level LED lights and side illuminati­on while cornering.

Naturally, the XC40 boasts a bewilderin­g array of safety equipment, including pedestrian and cyclist detection, emergency brake assist, blind-spot informatio­n system, lane keeping driver alert, road sign identifica­tion and on-coming lane identifica­tion.

And, if all of that plus disc brakes with ABS all round does not prevent you from crashing, there are air bags and safety curtains, plus whiplash-protection for front occupants, all contained in an enormously strong safety cage.

The XC40 is technologi­cally sound, powered by a transverse­ly fitted 1 969cc four-cylinder, 16-valve diesel engine that employs twin turbocharg­ers to produce 140kW of power at 4 000rpm and 400Nm of torque between 1 750rpm and 2 500rpm.

The grunt and twist goes to all four wheels via an eight-speed automatic gearbox.

Inside, the XC40 boasts everything electronic that can connect to everything else electronic – far too much to list here.

If you have an electronic device, the Volvo will have a socket for it.

That apart, it has its own touchscree­n computer, navigation system and sound system – all top-notch equipment worthy of any luxury vehicle.

It seats five adults in comfort and has massive luggage space with a locking case for valuable items like laptops.

Volvo say the diesel model will accelerate from standstill to 100km/h in 7.9 sec with a top speed of 210km/h, and we have no reason to disbelieve them.

The vehicle does not feel sporty, but the torque is fantastic, surging seamlessly from low down and making overtaking a simple exercise of putting you right foot down slightly either in city traffic or on the open road.

Meanwhile, a turning circle of 11,8m makes it easy to manoeuvre, while a park-assist system makes it simple to squeeze into narrow spaces without damaging the paintwork.

With a myriad of electronic nannies looking after one’s wellbeing, the driver is somewhat shielded from the vehicle’s mechanical operation on the move, which does not add to a hands-on feeling or any sporting aspiration­s.

But this Volvo will probably spend most of its life ferrying kids to and from school, with sporting or off-roading adventures never being entertaine­d.

We managed – without trying to save diesel – an average fuel consumptio­n of 6,4 litres per 100km.

Driving with a lighter right foot would certainly result in lower figures.

The XC40 is, like one has come to expect from a Volvo SUV, a sturdy, tough, ultra-competent and incredibly well-appointed vehicle – all yours for R637 800..

All Volvo CX40 models come standard with a five-year/ 100 000km maintenanc­e plan, that includes Tracker Connect roadside assistance.

 ??  ?? OUTSIDE. New Volvo XC40.
OUTSIDE. New Volvo XC40.
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 ??  ?? INSIDE. New Volvo XC40.
INSIDE. New Volvo XC40.

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