Rochdale Observer

Up in the Air...

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version or £32,725 for a 2.0-litre diesel.

Both of the range toppers have 180bhp on tap giving the car more than enough performanc­e and both are fitted with eight speed automatic transmissi­ons.

Officially there’s less than half a second between the two when it comes to 0 to 60 times with the PureTech model marginally quicker at 8.2 seconds and the BlueHDi diesel 8.6.

Top speeds are 134mph for the petrol and 131 for the diesel but the real difference comes with fuel economy which is rated at 60.1 to the gallon for the oil burner with the PureTech version coming in at 49.6.

Emissions are 129 and 124g/km and that’s on 19-inch wheels in top grade Flair Plus trim. Entry level Feel models feature 130bhp engines with a 1.6-litre diesel rated at 68.9mpg and a 1.2-litre PureTech petrol model – both with manual gearboxes – at 54.3.

Those are commendabl­e figures for a car that tips the scales at some 1.5 tonnes and on our runs in the two higher powered versions of the C5 Aircross we saw averages of 39mpg for the PureTech and 43 for the diesel – both impressive given the conditions.

The C5 Aircross is a hugely important vehicle for Citroen – its first model in this class of SUV since 2013 – and not only is it dressed to impress but comes kitted out with no less than 20 safety and driver aids.

Those include Citroen’s first semiautono­mous driving set up that will hold the vehicle’s position on the road automatica­lly and – on the auto transmissi­on models – an adaptive cruise control system which can stop the vehicle and move off without driver interventi­on.

Other features include lane departure and blind spot warnings, automatic parking and a surroundvi­ew camera system while Citroen’s ConnectedC­AM dash cam is standard fit on mid-grade Flair trim models and on top specificat­ion Flair Plus cars and a £200 option on Feel versions.

Connectivi­ty is fully smartphone compatible and there’s a MirrorLink function to show your phone’s contents on the car’s eight-inch display screen.

Sat nav is standard on all but the entry level version and the C5 Aircross also sees the introducti­on of a multi-mode instrument panel which can be configured in a variety of ways to show everything from convention­al dials to navigation informatio­n.

Onboard storage is above average and includes a double-top opening centre console, a fair sized glovebox and a wireless phone charging pad.

Where the C5 Aircross scores is with its ride and handling which in this class of car is top notch thanks to Citroen’s Progressiv­e Hydraulic Cushion shock absorbers which iron out all but the most severe bumps as if they weren’t there.

Couple the advanced ride to extra padding in the seats and the C5 Aircross is one of the most comfortabl­e cars around – and that goes for off-road use too.

And with a sliding rear seating arrangemen­t made up of three individual seats, boot space ranges from a minimum of between 580 and a class leading 720 litres to a maximum of 1,630 with a load length of some 1.9 metres.

All in all, the C5 Aircross is quite a package and its ride quality is second to none in this class of SUV.

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