Autocar

Volvo XC60

Impressive new compact SUV

- MATT PRIOR @matty_prior

You know how people love SUVS and crossovers? Well, they like them so much that the previous-generation XC60, despite being nine years old, sold in greater numbers in 2016 than it ever had in its life before. That’s not how car sales patterns are meant to work. They usually peak a year or two after the car is launched and then slowly fade thereafter. But it shows how much people want (a) a Volvo, (b) an SUV and (c) ideally, a Volvo SUV. So here we are.

Volvo is undergoing something of a resurgence, what with the new XC90, and S90 and V90. This new XC60 is in the same vein, which is why, if you’ve been following Volvo’s new-found good fortune at all, you’ll know what to expect.

It’s an Audi Q5/BMW X3/land Rover Discovery Sport-sized car that uses the same Scalable Product Architectu­re (SPA) that underpins Volvo’s 90-series models. At 4.7m long, the five-seater is a little longer and wider but lower than the previous-generation XC60 and designed on the outside to have some new Volvo cues but retain lots of the appeal that made the old car such a success.

When it comes to suspension, here’s the deal: double wishbones at the front, with an integral link set-up at the rear, with coil springs at the front and a transverse leaf spring as standard at the back, and air springs optional all round.

As for powertrain­s, there’s nothing bigger under the bonnet than an engine of 2.0 litres and of no more than four cylinders. That can mean petrol or diesel, turbocharg­ing, or supercharg­ing and turbocharg­ing, or hybrid assistance, with some compressed air thrown in, too, which I’ll come back to.

In the UK we get two diesels

(a 187bhp D4 and a 232bhp D5), one turbo petrol (the 250bhp T5) and one petrol-electric hybrid (the 401bhp T8). All get eight-speed automatic gearboxes and all-wheel drive and, being Volvos, about 20-dozen safety systems, with upgrades on them optional.

This drive is of the D5, which in Britain comes in higher-grade trims only, while the range, in general, is priced from around £37,000 to £58,000. The meat of it comes in the low to mid-£40,000 range.

On the outside, the XC60 is at once familiar and yet obviously new at the same time; a bit like the XC90, in that way. Volvo talks about angling in the windows at the top to narrow the car’s upper profile, and throwing back the windscreen to make it more car-like and rakish. And although the roof and floor are lower, the roof has gone down more than the floor.

But this is still one of the more traditiona­lly proportion­ed SUVS. For all the changes, it still feels pretty light and airy inside. Material choices and colours no doubt help, and they continue the good work done by the 90-series models. Fit and finish is spot on and the design feels more ‘Scandinavi­an kitchen’ than ‘Japanese hi-fi’, pleasingly.

There’s plenty of space for occupants front and rear, perhaps because Volvo thinks that’s more important than a massive boot, which, at 505 litres, is about 45 litres shy of the class norm. The driving position is good. It’s lower than before, they say, but while Volvo talks about increasing the height of the centre console (necessary for packaging the batteries of hybrid versions) and standing the dashboard upright so it feels more cockpit-like, it’s still pretty relaxed.

Ditto the way it drives. Volvo says the 90-series models are meant to be ‘relaxed’ and that the 60 should make you feel ‘inspired’, as if the two are differentl­y perfumed shower gels.

Whatever, the XC60 is a way off being the most dynamic car in the class, but despite the fact that you and I enjoy driving, I don’t have a particular beef with that. Confident and predictabl­e is what Volvo has gone for and confident and predictabl­e is what it has achieved.

The ride comfort is particular­ly good – better, I think, than anything out of the 90 range so far. The XC90, for example, has fine body control for an SUV but a sometimes over-brittle ride as a result. The S90 and V90 lope along quite nicely but with an amount of float that you couldn’t allow on a taller car, like the XC60, because it would feel dreadfully boat-like.

Showing the kind of progress that suggests Volvo’s engineers are learning how to get the best from the SPA platform, then, the XC60 rides smoothly and yet also has decent enough control of its body movements. There are more agile-feeling SUVS in this class – Mercedes-benz and Audi and BMW make them – but if you want an agilefeeli­ng car, I’m generally inclined to think that you shouldn’t buy an SUV in the first place. The XC60 makes

confident, relaxing progress. It’s as if Theresa May is the chief chassis engineer: strong and stable, lads, strong and stable.

The steering, at three turns between locks, and with a decent turning circle, is of good speed. It’s accurate and mostly pleasingly weighted, too. And although it’s a little easy to whack some of the steering wheel controls, and it’d be nice if all versions had gearshift paddles, the wheel is a good size and shape. If you push on a bit, the XC60… look, let’s not pretend buyers have any intention of finding out, shall we? But like most SUVS, ultimately it can surprise you with how fast it can go, even though its body control gets a bit loose.

When mooching about, though, the 232bhp D5 engine, with its Power Pulse compressed air lagreducti­on system (see separate story, above right), seems quieter than in early SPA installati­ons. I’d want a back-to-back test before saying for sure how quiet – or, I still suspect, gruff – it is compared with, say, the equivalent unit from Audi or Mercedes-benz. And in Comfort or Eco modes – for you do, inevitably, get driving modes to choose from – the gearbox’s response can be overly relaxed when you ask something of it. That’s why standard paddles, to easily get you into the right gear, would be handy. But you can select an Individual driving mode, where the chassis can be left in its more compliant setting but the powertrain turned up to Dynamic, which gives better response. It’s still quite calm: Volvo’s idea of dynamic is not like, say, Porsche’s.

Ultimately, then, the XC60 continues Volvo’s current decent form. It’s a relaxed car with a

high-quality feel inside and with an ambience and gait that’s easy to warm to.

Unexpected­ly, last year, more than half of all Volvos sold were XC60S and XC90S, making Volvo an SUV company first and foremost – a situation that surprised Volvo executives just as much as it surprised anyone else. Given that a sizeable proportion of those sales were 4x4s introduced nearly a decade ago, this new XC60 might keep it an SUV company for a while to come, too.

 ??  ?? Some SUVS are more agile but the XC60 offers a pleasing balance of measured body control and a pliant ride
Some SUVS are more agile but the XC60 offers a pleasing balance of measured body control and a pliant ride
 ??  ?? New XC60 is slightly longer and wider than its predecesso­r but lower and it draws on underlying technology used in the XC90
New XC60 is slightly longer and wider than its predecesso­r but lower and it draws on underlying technology used in the XC90
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 ??  ?? Steering is good on almost all counts but it’s easy to catch some of the controls by accident
Steering is good on almost all counts but it’s easy to catch some of the controls by accident
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 ??  ?? Rear space is good, at the slight expense of boot space, which is 505 litres; touchscree­n has been revised
Rear space is good, at the slight expense of boot space, which is 505 litres; touchscree­n has been revised
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