Evo India

Citroen C5 Aircross

Citroen kicks off its Indian innings with its Compass and Tucson rival

- Photograph­y: Rohit G Mane

COMFORT. IF THERE IS ONE THING Citroen wants to be known for apart from being obviously French, it is for delivering comfort. All their communicat­ion, everything revolves around comfort and after a day with the Citroen C5 Aircross (Aircross is Citroenspe­ak for SUV), I can tell you that comfort isn’t mere marketing talk. This is Citroen’s global flagship, their brand shaper before the mass-market cars roll out next year and it does an absolutely wonderful job of delivering on comfort. Ride comfort, seat comfort, driving comfort, noise insulation, the C5 takes the stress out of driving. Even the annoying speed warning has a comfortabl­e tone to it. This test, then, is about the Thrill of Chilling.

Let’s start with the styling which is quite the departure from massive grilles and macho posturing that’s the norm with SUVs. Now I wouldn’t go so far as to call the C5 Aircross pretty — nobody seems to want pretty cars anymore — but I will say that the soft curves, well-proportion­ed stance, and right amount of detailing comes as a breath of fresh air. Citroen’s double chevrons extend into the full width of the nose, splitting the headlights with a narrow LED strip sitting atop the main beam, halogen on the Feel spec we are testing here, LED on the Shine variant. The latter also gets a panoramic sunroof and remote tailgate while both variants get 3D-effect LED taillamps, 18-inch wheels that fill out the wheel arches and neat touches like the red-ringed anodised sections that

emphasise the air dam. You will also notice red accents on the side skirts, Citroen calls them Airbumps, and there are red accents on the roof rails that contrast well with the blacked-out roof.

The C5 is 4500mm long, 2099mm wide and 1710mm high, all of which betters the Hyundai Tucson and Honda CR-V (which is no longer on sale) while the Jeep Compass is even smaller. The VW Tiguan, now only available in the Allspace 7-seater variant, is longer but narrower. All of which bodes well for interior space.

Advanced Comfort Seats

This is where the comfort-talk starts, with the wide, cushy and satisfying­ly plush front seats. No need to mince any words here, these are the best seats in this class and, while plush, are also supportive enough that you can spend the entire day in them in, err, comfort.

The rear too gets Advanced Comfort seats which comprise three equally-wide sections that individual­ly slide, recline and fold. Allied to the flat floor this gives you a thoroughly usable,

These are the best seats in this class and, while plush, are also supportive enough

and comfortabl­e, middle seat, not the narrow hump that its rivals deliver — and that makes the C5 a proper 5-seater. It’s a brilliant idea if you regularly have a full car load of people, even better if you cart around kids and will be spared the screams of the youngest one usually stuck in the middle.

In reality though how many times have you seen five or seven people squeezed into a car? And especially something like the C5 will usually have the owner sitting in the back while being chauffeure­d to work. With 60:40 split seats the extreme two seats are wider than the apologetic hump in the centre, which means you can spread out in the back. In the C5 though you are confined to your designated seat, pushed into the extremity with no elbow room against the door pad, no centre armrest and no way to spread out as the three seats are individual­ly bolstered. You get best-in-class shoulder room but with only one person in the back, all that space is gone to waste with no bums on the other seats. As for rear knee room, it is good enough but not best in class with

the Tiguan Allspace being considerab­ly more spacious and even the Tucson edges it out. On boot space though, with 580 litres expanding to 720 litres with the rear seats pushed forward and opening up to 1630 litres with the seats folded away, the C5 Aircross is best in class.

The cabin is lovely, the layout is well considered, quality of materials is spot-on and it feels expensive on the inside with plush arm rests, high-quality leather, and neat chromedeta­iling. Ahead of the driver is a 12.3-inch digital cockpit with a digital speedo in the centre and a retro-themed horizontal tacho above it that reminds me of the tuner on grandpa’s FM radio. The displays are configurab­le but in all three modes the tachometer is all but unreadable, you cannot get traditiona­l circular dials, and it doesn’t project navigation or music being played via CarPlay.

There is CarPlay and Android Auto operated via an 8-inch infotainme­nt touchscree­n which should feel small by current standards of giant screens, but works nicely enough. Getting used to it though will take time — I hit the air-con menu and then couldn’t for the life of me figure out how to get back to Google Maps on CarPlay, all this while trying to extricate myself from peak Mumbai traffic. It takes four presses in different places to get back to where you started, which just isn’t intuitive. Physical buttons for regular tasks, especially adjusting the air-con temperatur­e, would improve ergonomics considerab­ly. And if you’re in reverse there’s no way to get rid of the camera unless you start rolling forward.

Now comfort. We’ve already mentioned the fantastic seats packed with high density foam that’s finished in a mix of high-quality leather and cloth. The driver’s seat is electrical­ly operated but not the passengers’ and there aren’t any connected car features or even wireless charging. Cubby holes abound, the centre armrest hides an enormous compartmen­t that can hold a 1.5-litre bottle, even the glove box can take a 1.5-litre bottle, and there’s a total of 33 litres of storage space. The C5 gets an onboard air quality monitoring system that detects carbon monoxide and

nitrogen oxides to automatica­lly activate the air-con’s recirculat­ion while the activated carbon filter can take out very fine particles up to 2.5 microns. On the safety front there are six airbags. And finally there are double laminated front windows with an insulated layer and acoustic windshield along with heavy sound proofing for the engine compartmen­t to cut out engine, road and wind noise. It works so well your passengers will be surprised — and I mean really, really surprised! — to know that there’s a diesel engine under the hood.

Just the one diesel engine

There are two parts to Citroen’s Indian operations. The first is the greenfield engine and transmissi­on plant in Hosur, in partnershi­p with the CK Birla group (from whom the erstwhile PSA bought the Ambassador name plate), that has already started exporting gearboxes and assembles the C5’s 2-litre diesel engine and front axle. The second is the vehicle assembly unit in Thiruvallu­r, the former HM-Mitsubishi plant that PSA bought off the CK Birla group, and that’s where the C5 is assembled.

The 2-litre diesel puts out 174.5bhp and classbest figures of 400Nm of torque and 18.6kmpl fuel efficiency. It is exclusivel­y available with the 8-speed Aisin automatic transmissi­on. No manual gearbox, and no AWD though there is a terrain mode dial that Citroen calls Grip Control which alters the traction control settings for sand, mud and snow. It also gets hill descent control, hill start assist and a generous 230mm of ground clearance.

Citroen claims a 0-100kmph time of 9.5 seconds and the C5 Aircross definitely feels

C5 is beautifull­y compliant over all kinds of roads and at all kinds

of speeds

quick enough. The gearbox too works smoothly and unobtrusiv­ely and when you’re in the mood for it you can hit Sport mode which sharpens the gearbox responses or take manual control via the paddleshif­ters which are mounted on the steering column (like in a Ferrari!). That said, most owners are unlikely to bother with either.

The C5 hasn’t been designed to hustle. It’s not like the road manners are all over the place, and we shall come to that in a bit, but the focus is on The Thrill of Chilling rather than the Thrill of Driving. Everything about the C5 urges you to take it easy. The comfy seats, the barely audible engine, the impercepti­ble gearbox, the comfortabl­e suspension, all puts you in a relaxed frame of mind. You wind up feeling silly hustling the C5. Even the Stop-Start works so quietly and unobtrusiv­ely that you don’t bother hunting for the button to switch it off. An hour into the drive I came to the realisatio­n that not every car needs to win traffic light Grands Prix nor go round corners at a million miles an hour. More often than not you want a car that just takes the stress out of fighting traffic and the

C5 does that beautifull­y. And it is down to its pièce de résistance — the suspension.

Advanced Comfort suspension

The only other manufactur­er that talks about a magic carpet ride is Mercedes-Benz and again without mincing any words, the C5 Aircross rides like it is an S-Class made by Citroen. I kid you not, the C5 is beautifull­y compliant over all kinds of roads and at all kinds of speeds.

Volkswagen Group cars like the VW Tiguan and Skoda Kodiaq used to set the benchmark for ride comfort but, as we have always pointed out, at low speeds there’s an evident firmness to the ride; a slight jiggle over even slightly bumpy roads that gets completely ironed out as speeds increase. The Hyundai Tucson also rides in a similar manner, slightly firm at low speeds with compliance improving dramatical­ly as speeds rise, and is one of the reasons why we now rate it so highly. But what the C5 manages to do is also iron out the low-speed firmness to deliver a beautifull­y plush ride irrespecti­ve of speed. The Progressiv­e Hydraulic Cushions use two hydraulic bump stops in the dampers, one for compressio­n and the other for rebound, and the progressio­n they deliver at the end of the stroke make it far better at soaking in and isolating the cabin from road shocks compared to the usual rubber bushes. The pliancy and compliance is delicious. Over broken roads and sharp speed breakers the C5 rides beautifull­y and it doesn’t come at the expense of poor body control or a floaty ride on the expressway. To be sure, the Tiguan is more planted and stable on the expressway, and you do feel a bit of squishines­s in the C5 over the more severe expressway undulation­s taken at speed, but the overall ride comfort is clearly top of the class. The heavy sound insulation also means you cannot hear — or feel! — any suspension thuds or thumps. It’s an S-Class at a quarter of the price.

As for handling there is strong and sharp front-end bite, plenty of cornering grip, and your heart will not skip a beat when you go round the first corner. But, immediatel­y, you will back off before the second corner. Nothing about the C5’s demeanour encourages serious corner-carving. There’s abundant body roll and it leans heavily on its outside dampers. It’s not like the C5’s rivals are brimming with steering feel but even by those standards, the steering is disconnect­ed and remote while being completely effortless to operate. And if you get on the throttle mid-corner it will push even more enthusiast­ically into understeer, easily cured by getting off the gas and reminding yourself of The Thrill of Chilling. Braking though is strong with disc brakes all around.

A new benchmark?

In terms of comfort, without a doubt. For day-to-day use, in a city like Mumbai that prides itself on a breathtaki­ngly lackadaisi­cal approach to road surfacing, I cannot shower enough praise on the C5’s all-round comfort. You feel little and you hear even less of what’s going on outside. It really does take the stress out of daily commuting. That said though, even if you’re being chauffeure­d, the (excellent) front seat is the most comfortabl­e place to be. The rear, what with the democratic­ally partitione­d seat, will end up getting wasted on just one person who is confined to one corner and is unable to spread out into all the (considerab­le) space.

If I were Citroen India, I’d immediatel­y put in a requisitio­n to headquarte­rs for a traditiona­l 60:40 split rear seat that will suit the Indian buyer better.

The Hyundai Tucson is the only natural rival, now that the Tiguan is only petrol while the Compass is half a size smaller in terms of interior space (though surprising­ly expensive if you want a diesel automatic which can only be had with 4x4).

Pre-bookings for the C5 Aircross open in the first week of March and it goes on sale in the first week of April from 10 dealership­s. If priced right, in the region of `25 lakh, the C5 Aircross will do a good job of establishi­ng Citroen’s brand presence before the mass market C-Cubed cars start rolling out in a year’s time. And do it all, rather comfortabl­y. ⌧

I cannot shower enough praise on the C5’s all-round comfort. It really

does take the stress out of daily

commuting

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 ??  ?? Right: 8-speed automatic is standard as is the Grip Control terrain mode. Below: Chunky interior design theme with a squircle-like steering wheel and split air-con vents.
Bottom: 12.3-inch digital
cockpit
Right: 8-speed automatic is standard as is the Grip Control terrain mode. Below: Chunky interior design theme with a squircle-like steering wheel and split air-con vents. Bottom: 12.3-inch digital cockpit
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 ??  ?? Left: Excellent and very comfy front seats. Below: Rear seat is great for three with individual buckets, not so great for just the one passenger.
Bottom: 2-litre diesel makes 174.5bhp, 400Nm and delivers 18.6kmpl
Left: Excellent and very comfy front seats. Below: Rear seat is great for three with individual buckets, not so great for just the one passenger. Bottom: 2-litre diesel makes 174.5bhp, 400Nm and delivers 18.6kmpl
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