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Suzuki Ignis

Chunky city car offers excellent value for money

- Lawrence Allan Lawrence_allan@dennis.co.uk @Loballan

SEVERAL car makers have revived defunct model names for new models over the past few years; just look at the Vauxhall Viva and Hyundai Tucson. Suzuki brought the Baleno name back to life earlier this year, and now the Japanese brand has done it again with the Ignis.

The Ignis badge was last seen on the back of a Suzuki nine years ago, but it has to be said that the high-riding supermini never really captured the imaginatio­n of the British public, and didn’t prove an especially big seller. Perhaps it was a few years ahead of its time, given that the market for baby SUVS has skyrockete­d over the past few years.

In any case, the car that carries the Ignis name in 2016 is altogether more interestin­g. It sits on Suzuki’s new small car platform, and as such, shares components with the Baleno and forthcomin­g nextgenera­tion Swift supermini. The Ignis is, in effect, a crossover city car in the vein of the Fiat Panda 4x4. Suzuki cites chic rivals such as the Fiat 500 and Vauxhall Adam Rocks, too, so the Ignis has to be as much about form as function.

At 3.7 metres long, it’s slightly bigger than a Hyundai i10, but with its cutesy front end, narrow upper body, angled roofline and chunky wheelarche­s, it’s one of the most distinctiv­e small cars around. Love it or hate it – we happen to be in the former camp – but there’s no denying that the Ignis has a real personalit­y that only a handful of rivals can replicate.

The inside of the car is a little more convention­al, but it’s more upmarket than the stark surroundin­gs of Suzuki’s other city car offering, the Celerio. Brightenin­g things up is the two-tone finish for the dashboard and doors, while neat touches such as the glossy body-colour door pulls, tablet-style touchscree­n and separate console for the climate controls give the Ignis’s cabin some character.

The SZ5 model driven here also comes loaded with kit. It’s a pity the sat-nav and infotainme­nt system is a fiddly aftermarke­t Pioneer set-up rather than Suzuki’s own, while the plastics on the dash and door trims are hard and fairly insubstant­ial. Still, everything does feel well screwed together.

You sit fairly upright in the Ignis, and the cabin is narrow, but there’s a surprising amount of leg and headroom throughout. That’s thanks to both the short dashboard and the two individual sliding and reclining rear seats that are offered on mid-spec SZ-T models and above. The Suzuki serves up more space than many city car competitor­s, and four adults would be comfortabl­e enough on longer journeys.

The space is impressive, and given the Ignis’s light weight – it tips the scales from as little as 810kg, depending on the spec you choose – it feels eager on the road. All models get Suzuki’s willing 1.2-litre Dualjet four-cylinder petrol engine with 89bhp, but you can also add the 48-Volt SHVS mild hybrid system, as tested here.

The addition of electrical assistance helps to shave over two seconds from the 0-62mph sprint time, but the little

“The Ignis is more spacious than many city cars: four adults will fit comfortabl­y”

Suzuki feels even quicker than those figures suggest, and in an unusual trait for a hybrid vehicle, it’s happy to be revved out.

As you’d expect, the Ignis is fun to drive in town, thanks to the compact dimensions and good visibility. It’s a bit of a mixed bag once you get out on to the open road, however. On the one hand, the car feels nimble and the ride is cushioned and controlled at speed, but big bumps can unsettle it, and wind, engine and road noise are more evident than in a Volkswagen up!. Body roll is quite noticeable, too, and the steering is slow and vague when you begin to apply lock.

Our car was fitted with four-wheel drive, but the Ignis can’t really live up to its billing as a Panda 4x4 rival, because you don’t get any extra ground clearance. The system also eats into the boot space and reduces efficiency, so we’d expect a mid-spec front-wheel-drive variant to be a sweeter, better-value choice.

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 ??  ?? EQUIPMENT SZ5 models come as standard with tablet for sat-nav, plus offroad modes and alloys. They also get LED headlights, autonomous braking, keyless entry and climate control. But SZ-T is nearly as well equipped and even better value
EQUIPMENT SZ5 models come as standard with tablet for sat-nav, plus offroad modes and alloys. They also get LED headlights, autonomous braking, keyless entry and climate control. But SZ-T is nearly as well equipped and even better value
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