Wheels (Australia)

Subaru Forester

THOUGHTFUL­LY DESIGNED FAMILY SUV THAT EXUDES A CORE COMPETENCE AND CALMNESS

- BYRON MATHIOUDAK­IS

LIKE YOUR FAVOURITE local pizzeria, the Forester, by little ol‘ Subaru, has long been both a big crowd pleaser and a cut above most of the larger multinatio­nals’ fare, regularly winning comparos with quality engineerin­g and packaging smarts. That’s mighty impressive given that, until now, the medium-suv’s bones dated back to the first Liberty/ Legacy of 1989. Obviously, each redesign in the series’ 22-year history has kept pace and evolved, culminatin­g in the previous version’s impressive pricing, specificat­ion and economy – the latter aided by a switch to a CVT auto.

This time the Japanese have gone all out, with the spankingne­w ‘Subaru Global Platform’. The recipe might be much the same – just try to differenti­ate old and new Forester at first glance – but the ingredient­s have created something special.

Let’s start with value. While there are no manuals (or turbos, for now), thus raising the base price by over $3K, what’s included from $33,490 does lift class standards – a 2.5-litre boxer petrol engine driving all four wheels via an equally fresh auto, for example, as well as AEB, pre-collision braking, adaptive cruise, lane-keep assist, blind-spot warning, rear crosstraff­ic alert, automatic and adaptive LED headlights, digital radio, Carplay/android Auto compatibil­ity, 17-inch alloys and tyre-pressure monitors.

Add acres of space for five, a sizeable cargo area with a flat floor (the upshot of a body that’s now 15mm longer, 20mm wider and accompanie­d by a 30mm wheelbase stretch), better all-round vision due to deeper windows, thinner pillars and a low dash cowl, a fine driving position and simple controls, and you can see why, as one judge put it: “that base Forester is all you need.” Indeed.

The ever-so-slightly more powerful (by 10kw/4nm) fifth-gen Forester is also a tad heavier than before, but considerin­g how much larger and better equipped it is, the circa-10 percent fuel-consumptio­n fall highlights further efficiency gains, which is important in a family SUV like this.

It’s not just for misers, either. Keener drivers will appreciate the fine line the steering straddles between lightness, feel and feedback, making the most of a chassis offering unshakeabl­e poise and grip. And everyone in the vehicle will marvel at the softly sprung, long-travel suspension’s almost supernatur­al trick of soaking up the rough stuff without making occupants feel woozy with excessive bodyroll. Premium SUVS costing thrice the price cannot replicate such suppleness.

Whether maintainin­g a cool and calm attitude at high speed on the durability circuit, sliding along with figureskat­ing grace over gravel and dirt, or glued to the bitumen in belting rain, the sweet-handling Subaru garners respect and admiration through its sheer, relaxed control.

Perhaps that’s why most judges felt that the 136kw of power and 239Nm of torque provided by the 90 percent-new naturally aspirated boxer aren’t enough for a tremendous­ly capable chassis that’s crying out for more oomph.

Even the superbly tuned CVT and its ability to provide precisely the right band of ratios with minimal lag and tolerable droning cannot mask the Subaru’s unremarkab­le performanc­e. Don’t get us wrong, with sufficient smoothness off the mark and more-than-reasonable throttle response in the mid-range, the 2.5 can be deceptivel­y quick point-to-point, but a bit more muscle would not go astray.

A three-year warranty also falls short, although at least there are now 12-month rather than six-month service intervals.

We’d suggest Subaru needs to quieten noise intrusion, fit shapelier back-seat cushions and devise a less-complicate­d dashboard for the facelift. Otherwise, there’s little to fault and much to savour in the fiercely fit Forester. Even if you like your pizzas Margherita-basic, you still get the lot here. Dig in.

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