New Zealand Company Vehicle

Mahindra – in for the long haul

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With Mahindra’s Pik Up utility making waves, the distributo­r thought it a good idea to remind us about the Pik Up’s more civilised cousin – the seven-seat XUV500 SUV.

It just so happened that an XUV needed to come up from one of Mahindra’s most enthusiast­ic dealership­s – Morrison Cars in Christchur­ch – to a rendezvous at Cambridge, before Mahindra’s big relaunch at the end of March.

After an hour and a half flight and a 20-minute magical Mahindra tour, I was given the keys to a silver XUV500 W6 model, instructio­ns on how to leave town and bid a bonny farewell.

The long straights out of town gave me a good opportunit­y to check out the XUV’S finer points.

Sophistica­ted electronic aids such as a tyre pressure monitoring system, easyto-link Bluetoothe­ry, voice command, one touch cruise control, hill descent control and a pleasantly operable centre stack with aircon controls tucked in under the audio controller­s, are all part of the in-cockpit package.

These are in turn, below an inset display screen. It lacks pretty colours, but it tells you what you need to know, without glare. There’s also a chilled centre box, which I should have paid more attention to.

I found a remarkable amount of space in the back of the Mahindra. Good leg and headroom, plenty of seat support and unlike many so-called full-size SUVS, big rear windows to minimise ‘technicolo­ur yawns’ brought on by too much fizz and not enough view.

Since the XUV is a family getaway weekend vehicle, the Kaikoura Coast road seemed an appropriat­e route north, and by around mid-morning, the Mahindra’s aircon was going full out to keep me from being a molten puddle on the cloth trim.

The engine – a 2.2-litre mhawk petrol with 103kw and 320Nm of torque to play with – wasn’t even breathing hard, let alone sweating.

I was mindful of the front wheel drive’s skittish nature on broken road surfaces.

The consistent lack of body roll from the monocoque chassis though, outweighs momentary traction flutters.

The six-speed automatic is brilliantl­y matched to the engine, and I made better time than I thought to the Interislan­der, which was OK as the docksiders were curious as to what the Mahindra was.

At Otaki and on the wrong side of midnight, I decided to refuel the SUV and recharge the driver.

The Mahindra’s fuel computer reads in km per litre, not the other way around and recomputed, I was getting a solid 9.8 litres per 100km, better than I can get out of a diesel double cab ute and I can carry more in the Mahindra.

Otaki’s not known for its late-night accommodat­ions, so I improvised, parking the Mahindra up in a side street for the night.

The true test of an SUV’S comfort? A sleepover! I dropped the seats, cracked open a window and was good for about six hours of shuteye, waking up as fresh as a daisy – a daisy needing a shower and shave admittedly, but otherwise good to go.

On home turf now, I was comfortabl­e cruising my way up and made it to my changeover just on midday and a half – 22 hours drive time from Christchur­ch to Cambridge.

So ended my mile munching Mahindra run and to say I’m impressed with the vehicle is an understate­ment. In value for money stakes, its hard to go past the amount of SUV you get for $30k and if this is the quality we can expect as a baseline indicator, Mahindra has a very bright feature in New Zealand.

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