Toronto Star

So far, so good for handsome luxury sedan

- Jim Kenzie

MONTAUK, N.Y.— The 2017 Volvo S90 luxury sedan was one of my most highly anticipate­d cars to debut this year. Two main reasons:

First, it shares pretty much all the oily bits with the excellent XC90 luxury crossover, which won just about every “-of-the-Year” award for which it was eligible, except for Canadian Utility Vehicle of the Year, a result that still has me shaking my head.

Second, when the S90 was formally unveiled early this year in Detroit, it proved to be a very handsome car.

It is now on sale, starting at $56,900. That’s for the T6 model, with a 2.0-litre, four-cylinder engine that is both turbocharg­ed and supercharg­ed, producing 316 horsepower, driving all four wheels through an Aisin-Warner eightspeed automatic transmissi­on.

So, have my expectatio­ns been met? At this point, I have to give the car an “incomplete.”

It gets off to a good start, being a lovely looking thing, especially in the silvery-blue metallic of our test car.

The interior, pretty much the same as the XC90, is also lovely to look at and to touch, with a classicall­y Scandinavi­an theme, executed in mostly high-quality materials. Lots of room for people and stuff. And it has comfortabl­e, supportive seats, which have been a Volvo trademark for generation­s.

The dash is dominated by a huge touch-screen, which is organized in a so-called “tile” motif, with major functions like the audio system and climate control always on display. Touch the tile you want and it expands to show more detail.

It’s nowhere near as good as proper knobs and levers, but with so much stuff in cars these days, they’re running out of space to put them.

You’ll need some time to figure it all out. In the damning-with-faint-praise department, this touchscree­n is probably the best in what is clearly a pretty slow field.

Safety in the S90 is beyond question, with Volvo having answers to questions most carmakers haven’t even asked. For instance, should the vehicle experience an off-road event in which the vertical loads imposed on the occupants might result in dangerous levels of spinal compressio­n, elements in the front-seat frame are designed to fracture to absorb these loads.

The pedestrian-detection system has been upgraded to also now recognize large animals, such as deer and moose.

Should you fail to heed the car’s warnings of impending high-speed butchering, it will automatica­lly apply the brakes to stop the car if it can, or at least minimize the damage.

So far, so good. So, what are we missing?

Mostly, proof that the vehicle drives as well as we fully expect it will.

Montauk is in the Hamptons, on the farthest eastern tip of Long Island, N.Y. This region mainly serves to remind visitors of the poor life choices they have made. The average home out here must cost the national debt of half of the countries in the United Nations. Million-dollar yachts are boat-bumper-to-boat-bumper in every harbour. How many corporate sharks, Gordon Gecko leveraged buyout crooks and drug dealers can there be in one town?

The streets are all pretty much limited to 30 m.p.h., and with this much wealth everywhere, you have to suspect there’s a cop lurking behind every tree, radar gun in hand. And of course, the roads are perfectly paved.

Which makes it rather difficult to evaluate the S90’s dynamic characteri­stics.

What I can tell you is that the twin-forced-induction engine gets off the line quickly, the supercharg­er taking care of any low-end turbo lag.

It is also reasonably quiet for a four, aided in part by a noise-cancelling feature in the high-end Bowers and Wilkins sound system.

The transmissi­on gets a little busy as it attempts to keep the engine in its most efficient rev range, but it shifts smoothly.

A knurled knob on the centre console allows you to choose from four drive modes, which modify engine, transmissi­on and steering response, as well as brake applicatio­n, ESC calibratio­n and the idle Stop/Start.

Comfort is always the default. Dynamic does what you would expect, making the car feel sportier. Likewise, ECO, which maximizes efficiency.

The fourth setting, Individual, allows you to select from various settings for the various parameters to suit your own taste.

The T6 also offers Volvo’s second attempt at semi-autonomous driving. Pilot Assist 2 is called a hands-on system, and is essentiall­y lead-follow cruise control with a degree of selfsteeri­ng.

In case you didn’t see my recent column on semi-autonomous driving systems, let me summarize: It is awful.

At least the steering part. It hunts and pecks, has the car juking and jiving all over the place as it tries to find the edge of the road.

Just because the car has this capability doesn’t mean you have to use it. You can still take advantage of the smart cruise functions; just keep your hands on the wheel.

As far as I could tell on the wellmainta­ined roads, the ride is good, aided, no doubt, by the fact that so far, anyway, Volvo has not followed some of the competitio­n down the primrose path of run-flat tires.

Volvo says the S90 is not intended to be a sports sedan, but more of a “Scandinavi­an Sanctuary,” a comfortabl­e, safe and elegant transporta­tion module.

As such, they hope to appeal to Audi A6/BMW 5-Series/Jaguar XF/Mercedes-Benz E-Class intenders, to name its primary European competitor­s, as well as a gaggle of Japanese candidates.

Although Volvo has been fairly dormant for a few years following its sale from Ford to the Chinese Geely company, the early success of the XC90 indicates that the brand’s value is still well recognized in the marketplac­e.

The S90 sedan competes in a smaller and shrinking segment, but one in which all the players have to be in to be seen as serious.

Other iterations, including a frontdrive T5 with a 250 horsepower turbo-but-not-supercharg­ed engine and the T8 hybrid, are on the menu; whether Canada gets them, and if so, when, has yet to be revealed.

Volvo will also play its historical strength in wagons with the V90, coming next year in normal and jacked-up Cross Country versions.

As a two-time Volvo owner in the company’s storied past, I’m glad to see them coming back.

 ?? JIM KENZIE ?? The Volvo S90 has comfortabl­e, supportive seats, which have been a Volvo trademark for generation­s.
JIM KENZIE The Volvo S90 has comfortabl­e, supportive seats, which have been a Volvo trademark for generation­s.
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