New Zealand Company Vehicle

Subaru Forester

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Start/stop functional­ity.

Highlights include blind spot monitoring, lane departure and lane keeping, automatic emergency braking, forward collision warning, evasive steer assist, front and rear cameras and parking sensors, cross traffic alert, traffic sign recognitio­n and intelligen­t speed assist, airbags front, rear and side and my personal favourite, tyre pressure monitoring.

While the Escape can live up to its name as a getaway/go anywhere vehicle – especially with the selectable drive modes of eco, normal, slippery and sport – its best kept to ‘mild off-roading’ in reality.

Tackling the Nevis Road in Queenstown is a little bit more than you could expect of the Escape, but State Highway ‘Beach’ on the upper west coast is fine.

One last strength of the Escape – and you won’t find this comment in a glossy car mag – is its profession­al demeanour.

The Escape was, at one time, all about adventure and very little else. With the fourth generation, the Escape is as at home in the lawyer’s parking space as it is at the top 10 Holiday park.

This is the Ford which suits every and any customer. It’s the most universall­y appealing vehicle Ford has ever produced, and as I recall, that was just what Henry was looking to provide. Job done.

Subaru Forester X Sport

How to describe that certain something which rekindles the enigmatic spirit of the original ugly truckling?

If you thought that was a little unkind, cast your mind’s eye back to the first time you saw a Forester – that would have been around 1997, when design aesthetics were very different.

The Forester arrived and everyone went “hmm, it might get better with age” and it did, though there would be those who found the 97 model’s eccentric look endearing.

The SF model went through to 2002 with the SG and that led to the SH (third generation) which arrived in 2009 to 2013. Then we saw the SJ in 2014 through to 2018, leading to the current SK four variant model line-up, which was launched in 2019.

And just when we thought that would be something of a swan song for the Forester, given its “this vehicle has everything Subaru can possibly put into it, including hybrid tech” credential­s, along comes the Forester X-sport – something strangely subtle from Subaru.

Nothing has been done to the ‘Subaru normal’ 2.5-litre, four cylinder, horizontal­ly opposed engine.

Forester still puts out 134kw and 239Nm of torque via the Lineartron­ic SLT sevenspeed transmissi­on with manual mode.

The X Sport also retains All-wheel Drive engineerin­g and X-mode, which improves traction and handling, when driving on lowgrip surfaces, like mud or snow.

Then there is Eye-sight, the second pair of eyes crash avoidance system and also the driver monitoring system which uses facial recognitio­n to identify the driver and monitor their behaviour and trends.

And passengers find the Forester a particular­ly pleasant vehicle to be in the back of, with lots of legroom, lots of visibility and an inherent feeling of security.

With all these features onboard then, what’s so special about the X Sport?

Orange you glad we’re here to tell you?

The big thing with the X Sport Subaru is orange – more specifical­ly, orange highlights in sometimes unusual places.

For instance, the supports for the roof rails are orange, there’s orange accents for the front, side, and rear under guard and inside, the orange highlight treatment is found around the air vents, the central gear shift command and control set-up. And yes, there’s orange piping on the water-repellent seats and orange stitching on the wheel.

Which is all well and good, but is that it? Orange highlights? Well, no, not exactly.

In addition to everything which led the Forester to gain numerous Vehicle of the

Year awards: safety, technology, drivabilit­y and Subaru DNA, the Forester X Sport gains some premium specificat­ions like the eightinch touchscree­n, which allows for satellite navigation display, and you get push button start and a power tailgate. As well, The X Sport boasts black 18-inch alloys to match the black grille and the black driving light surrounds.

The orange highlights are technicall­y called performanc­e aesthetics, and while they don’t contribute to performanc­e, they do contribute to the Forester getting its mojo back.

For all the SK’S technical brilliance – and it really, really is brilliant – some have felt its excellence has come at the expense of the X factor which the Forester has always had in its previous incarnatio­ns in one form or another.

This must have given the designers a real headache: “look, we’ve loaded this SUV to the max when it comes to safety and traction; there’s even stuff onboard which customers didn’t know they wanted. What more can we do?”

I reckon the engineers fell into the trap of functional­ity without aesthetic considerat­ion and ended up producing a bewilderin­g cabin with split screens and an overload of driver informatio­n, buttons and controls.

Probably in frustratio­n, the engineers went to the designers and fed them some form of energy drink after which, the designers had a massive sugar rush, then went and amplified on what the engineers had done.

I guess the logic of introducin­g multiple textured surfaces and throwing orange paint everywhere was that it would have the effect of balancing the driver’s logical left-brain lobe with the creatively inspired right.

But guess what? It works.

While still carrying everything it did, the cabin has become, not relaxing exactly, but perhaps more ‘comfortabl­y’ engaging.

I’d say the driver gets ‘comfortabl­y numb,’ but I’d get a lawsuit from Pink Floyd and it wouldn’t be fair to Subaru who has always – and I mean always – produced engaging vehicles to drive.

Final analysis? The X Sport allows drivers and passengers to appreciate the overall excellence which the Forester has always had as a hallmark. It’s just gotten better now.

VERDICT

Despite these two SUVS competing against each other for your affection, they really are quite disparate in their roles. The Escape is trying to be all things to all comers while the Forester is trying to be the best four-pawed vehicle that’s not an XV or an Outback.

With its superior ground clearance, the Forester is more for the adventurou­sly inclined, which would lead one to think the Escape would be the better on road.

On tarmac, the Subaru is a tad quieter, but the Ford comes up trumps when it comes to the least body roll.

The Forester looks better for its fuel use and CO2 emissions, but the Escape delivers in physical size and greater power and torque from a smaller engine.

This perhaps sends a message that the Forester is more fleet-friendly in terms of its performanc­e while the Escape is geared more to the private sector.

You couldn’t be more wrong, as it’s the other way around according to the distributo­rs. Your fleet provider will be able to coach you more on residuals and cost of ownership, where we suspect the Ford might edge out the Subaru.

Servicing sees the Ford win on a standard package, but Subaru is also offering a revised extended servicing and warranty plan, so ask about that if you are buying direct.

Do we then, have a winner? Depends on what you want and how much you read into the bottom-line price.

At RRP the Forester eats the Escape all day long, but if you consider list price, well, you won’t always get the full story.

Technicall­y, bang for buck says ‘go

Subaru’ and while our evaluation gives a pretty good assessment of what’s onboard, compare the basic Forester with the X Sport to see everything that you have access to.

As an interestin­g exercise, we priced the base model AWD Escape and the base model Forester and found the same pricing difference, about $8,500, the difference you’ll find between the X’s.

We felt the two vehicles, as similar as they appear, actually appeal to different markets and certainly to different buyers.

This being the case, some will be looking to the Escape and thinking it’s a little too convention­al while others will view the Forester as a little too far left of centre (despite having symmetrica­l AWD).

Kudos should go to Ford for design which is radically different. The Forester is subtle evolution, compared to the Escape’s revolution.

Our pick has to go with the vehicle which will best serve the needs of the fleet buyer and while we love the Forester for all it has to offer, it’s individual­ity is its undoing, compared to the Escape.

We’d be putting the screws on our lease provider, however; $8 and a half k buys an SUV load of lattes!

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