Wheels (Australia)

LIES, DAMN LIES AND KERB WEIGHTS

We put COTY contenders on the scales

- ANDY ENRIGHT

LURKING AT THE far end of Ford’s You Yangs proving ground is an unpreposse­ssing-looking shed. Blink and you’d miss it, but located amongst the hoists and workshop equipment within is a weighbridg­e, and seeing as it was located en route to many of our COTY test tracks, we figured we’d put every single vehicle onto the scales. All 47 cars at COTY this year had to strip off, suck the gut in and hope for the best.

Some results were fairly predictabl­e. The Alpine A110 was lightest at 1094kg, just pipping Volkswagen’s base model Polo 70 TSI at 1111kg. Few, though, would have picked Porsche to front up with the fatty, its Cayenne E-hybrid creaking onto the weighing gear at a whopping 2364kg.

More interestin­g than absolute numbers, however, was what the scales proved against manufactur­er claims. Hats off to Ford for accuracy here. The press pack told us the Focus Trend 1.5 should weigh 1336kg and it was bang on the money. To make things absolutely fair we measured the amount of fuel in the cars and calculated representa­tive tare and kerb weights from that.

The wooden spoon probably ought to go to Alfa Romeo. Its Stelvio Ti should have weighed 1619kg, but it tipped the scales some 187kg heavier. That’s around 11.5 percent heftier than buyers would expect.

The base Stelvio and the diesel were also a good deal heavier than the manufactur­er claim, up by 138 and 167kg respective­ly. The five-seat diesel Stelvio also weighed 13kg more than the vast seven-seat diesel Mazda CX-8.

Audi was no angel here either, its A8 50 TDI adding 184kg to the 1975kg claimed kerb weight. The Skoda Karoq also weighed in 11.35 percent heavier than its billed weight, while Citroen’s C3 carried 10.3 percent more than its factory claim.

Holden and Toyota get credit for generally overquoted weights, and the Hyundai Santa Fe Highlander diesel also surprised us, weighing 1.85 percent under its claimed kerb weight, tipping the scales at 1958kg against a claimed 1995kg figure. Volvo’s XC40 T4 Momentum was second behind the Hyundai in the greatest percentage under claim, its 29kg representi­ng 1.78 percent less than the factory number.

Finally, if somebody’s trying to tell you that seven-seat SUVS are uniformly fat and wasteful, it’s worth noting that apart from the Mazda CX-8 being more limber than the ‘sporty’ Stelvio, Peugeot’s 5008 three-row hauler tipped the scales some 215kg lighter than Holden’s Calais V Tourer. And Hyundai’s Santa Fe Active was also some 20kg lighter than the hefty Holden.

The take-out from this? Given that some cars are optioned differentl­y from base spec, we’d understand if weights were a few percent either way of the datum. But more than ten percent for the worst offenders? Given that the weight of a car is directly proportion­al to its fuel consumptio­n and emissions, consumers surely deserve better.

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