Townsville Bulletin

PREMIUM ECONOMY

This hybrid saves plenty of fuel, but you need to pay a higher price to put one in the driveway

- IAIN CURRY & JULES LUCHT

The GWM Haval Jolion is a well-priced offering in the popular small SUV segments, with a long seven-year warranty and cheap running costs. But does a new hybrid version push its luck at $40,990 drive-away? Our family of testers find out.

FIRST IMPRESSION­S

IAIN: Hybrid small SUVS are in demand and hard to find. Fresh to market is this GWM Haval Jolion Ultra HEV.

JULES: Catchy name and it looks good inside and out.

IAIN: Haval’s designers deserve kudos. Even anti-chinese keyboard warriors must admit they’re easy on the eye.

JULES: It’s chunky yet elegant t and the lights are spectacula­r. Up front t are giant teardrop daytime running lights, hts, 11 stacked bars for indicators and d three blue-surround LED headlights. ts.

IAIN: And all in one cluster unit! nit! Can you imagine the cost to replace e a damaged one?

JULES: Black and silver 18-inch ch alloys, a giant sparkly grille and d racy rear bumper add sportiness.

IAIN: But the rear’s tarnished with giant badges explaining what it is. Less is more, Haval.

JULES: How much is it and what hat are the rivals?

IAIN: It’s $40,990, a fair jump from non-hybrid Jolions, which ch start from $27,490. The hybrid d in Ultra grade costs $8000 more than the petrol version. It will be cross-shopped against hybrid versions of Honda HR-V ($47,000), 000), Kia Niro S ($44,380), Toyota Corolla Cross GXL ($39,250) and Toyota C-HR Koba ($37,665). A pure electric MG ZS costs $44,990.

JULES: You save money on fuel, el, but those are big entry prices for small SUVS.

THE LIVING SPACE

IAIN: If I’m paying $40k for an n

V1 - BULE01Z01M­A emerging Chinese car brand, I expect to be blown away. I’m impressed and disappoint­ed in equal measure.

JULES: Okay. What’s the good stuff?

IAIN: It’s loaded. The aforementi­oned rivals can’t match the Jolion’s kit. Comfy faux leather, a glass roof, heated front seats, a 12.3-inch infotainme­nt screen and 7-inch digital driver readout and head-up display.

JULES: Now have your grumble …

IAIN: There’s no steering wheel reach adjustment, which meant I couldn’t get comfy, the door tops are hard plastic, the USB ports are near-impossible to reach and only the driver’s seat’s electric. And there’s no wireless Apple Carplay/android Auto despite wireless charging.

JULES: Are you done?

IAIN: No. Its rotary gear selector barely illuminate­s what gear you’re in. Reverse? Drive? It’s a mystery until you hit the throttle. Not ideal.

JULES: Your points are valid, but the cabin design’s clean, minimalist, spacious and presents really well.

THE COMMUTE

IAIN: Having driven the non-hybrid Jolion, this is a far better experience.

JULES: There’s The an instant torque hit, I presume presu due to the hybrid?

IAIN: IAIN Yep. There’s a small battery and electric e motor backing up the otherwise other tardy 1.5-litre petrol engine. engin The hybrid works in the background back – you don’t need to do anything any – and it runs only on electricit­y at slow speed.

JULES: I love that. Silent cruising in traffic and when you floor it there’s decent, instant zip.

IAIN: There are three levels of regenerati­ve braking to choose from, helping you to recharge the battery. Time it right on the most aggressive setting and you’ll come to a stop without touching the brakes.

JULES: It rides well, is easy to drive and quite smooth, although the brakes can be grabby.

IAIN: Haval’s confusing operating system and assist systems drive me nuts.

JULES: Agreed. You adjust temperatur­e through the screen, but if you press the “AC” button to access it, the climate control turns off. To turn on the heated seat you press an “Off” button on the screen. Madness.

IAIN: A Big Brother camera monitors your eyes to check you’re watching the road; dare cross a line and you’re ordered: “Hey, don’t stray!” while the active cruise control gives up on corners. This all needs work.

THE SHOPPING

JULES: The boot’s reasonable, but where’s the auto tailgate?

IAIN: You’d expect it at this price. The turning circle’s terrible, but the surround view camera’s superb.

SUNDAY RUN

JULES: I found it more fun in town than on a country drive. Silent electric urban travel for me and it’s good-looking enough to park outside boutiques.

IAIN: It corners well enough and fat tyres help absorb bumps. The steering’s a bit lifeless and it’s no dynamic joy, but it feels controlled, safe and easy … if you can tolerate its warning beeps.

THE FAMILY

JULES: It has excellent rear space – more like a medium SUV’S.

IAIN: It’s lovely and light with the glass roof, too. Air vents and rear USBS kept out kids happy.

JULES: There are lots of safety aids, even if some lack finesse: emergency lane keep, blindspot monitor and auto braking front and rear.

IAIN: It’s a lot more efficient than the standard petrol version; a claimed 5.0L/100km compared with 8.1L/100km. We returned 6.4L/100km.

The warranty’s an excellent seven years, while services are pleasingly cheap.

THE VERDICT

JULES: The hybrid Jolion is a much nicer, perkier urban drive than the purely petrol version. I’m impressed with the included kit, but it can infuriate in ways a $40k car shouldn’t. IAIN: The hybrid brings better economy and a smoother and punchier ride, especially in town. But the $8000 premium is too much.

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