BBC Top Gear Magazine

Nissan Juke

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REPORT 2

£ 25,295 OTR/£25,295 as tested/£350pcm

WHY IT’ S HERE

To see if the original baby crossover can reclaim its crown

DRI V ER

Esther Neve

THIS ISSUE THE LONG-TERM JUKE HAS A STARRING ROLE IN THE

Drives Opener group test on p40. It’s up against the Ford Puma and the Renault Captur, and (presumably you know this already if you read magazines front to back, but if not, sorry for the spoiler...) the Juke does not win. Sad face.

I kind of understand why – tests of these cars ultimately come down to personal preference or a very rigid adherence to the concept... in this instance, the best small family crossover. The Juke, with its comparativ­ely small boot, high loading lip and relatively confined-feeling rear seating area does not immediatel­y shine as a family car. But who buys one as such anyway? I doubt Nissan itself really believes it’s a family car more than an urban runabout.

Even as an urban runabout though, the Juke does throw up a couple of issues. Primarily that the in-town ride quality is somewhat crunchy; speed bumps are a world of pain if you take them any faster than crawling pace. Conversely, on the motorway, ride quality improves drasticall­y meaning longer journeys are much more comfortabl­e than city rat runs. Sadly, as Paul points out in the group test, for a small, fun car, it’s just not quick enough to be properly fun to drive.

However, there are other positives we can take from this test. That stereo is epically good – certainly the best on test. Also, whether you like it or not, it’s refreshing to see a car with a distinctiv­e styling. The first-generation Juke was wilfully wacky, too wacky for many, but with this second-generation car the craziness has been dialled back a bit and the design feels more finished, less adolescent­ly awkward.

So, it may not have won the test, but it’s no loser.

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