Weekend Herald

Small taste of the next BIG THING?

The Jaecoo J7 is heading to New Zealand, but we got to check it out in China a bit earlier

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The Jaecoo J7 is going to be the first model in Chinese manufactur­er Omoda Jaecoo’s SUV sub-brand to land on our shores when it arrives sometime in the next few months.

The J7 shares its underpinni­ngs with the Omoda C5 that is a recent arrival to the local market, but while the Omoda comes with a choice of 1.5-litre/CVT, 1.6-litre/

7-speed DCT or all-electric powertrain­s, the J7 is likely to land here with either the 1.6-litre/

7-speed DCT or a new 1.5-litre plug-in hybrid version with 255kW/

525Nm and an electric-only range up to 88km, that was just revealed at the recent Beijing Auto Show.

Chery claims the J7’s PHEV powertrain boasts best-in-class thermal efficiency of 44.5 per cent — most road legal car engines have thermal efficiency of between

20 and 40 per cent — and that it has a total range of more than

1200km, with real world fuel consumptio­n of 4.9l/100km.

Unlike most other PHEVs, the J7 boasts DC fast charging and V2L capabiliti­es that allow it to act as a power source for external electronic­s.

While we got to take a closer look at the PHEV at the show, we also managed to briefly get behind the wheel for a quick taste of the petrol J7 at a short track in the parking lot of an amusement park in Wuhu city. Yes, really.

A few laps around a short accelerati­on course with a few small chicanes on the return was all we got, but it was a tantalisin­g taste of what we can expect when the J7 lands here in the next few months.

From the outside, the J7 is a handsome mid-size SUV with more convention­al, squared-off styling than that of the more ornate Omoda C5 it shares its underpinni­ngs with.

Upon entering the J7, the sheer quality of its interior is deeply impressive, not just on par with what we have already seen in its Omoda C5 sibling but, if anything, a bit above that.

High quality seat and upper dash materials do a good job of hiding some harder plastics low down in the cabin, but even these feel of a good quality, while the level of tech and infotainme­nt goodies is impressive.

Comfortabl­e seats are nicely complement­ed by a plush ride, which does see it leaning quite hard on the outside front tyre through corners, but that body roll is beautifull­y controlled and any movement is nicely telegraphe­d to the driver. It’s soft, yes, but the blend between ride comfort and handling seems to be about right for a medium SUV. At least in an amusement park parking lot.

Like its Omoda sibling, the J7 also has a distinct lack of strong self-centring to its steering, which is also extremely light and almost feels over-assisted. While this is actually more of an advantage in a car that is going to spend a lot of time running around town, it does become a bit frustratin­g on the open road.

That said, we don’t know what market spec the car we drove was, so this could be different in the cars we see in New Zealand.

From a very short taste, the pure-ICE Jaecoo J7 feels very similar to the Omoda C5 GT we drove recently and came away rather impressed.

Sharing an engine and transmissi­on with the J7, the C5 GT is priced at $37,990 for the 2WD model, and featured a more sophistica­ted independen­t rear suspension set-up that offers up a more settled ride than the standard C5’s torsion beam rear.

I would put money on the Jaecoo J7 sharing the superior rear suspension as well as its engine and suspension, as it had a similarly settled ride to the C5 GT.

Even though it was a very brief taster, the sheer level of quality and composure on show in the J7 impressed immediatel­y, while the only real possible negative was related to steering feel, which is a personal thing anyway.

If Omoda Jaecoo land the J7 here at similarly aggressive pricing to the Omoda C5 (which looks extremely likely at this stage), then the Jaecoo J7 should offer up a truly convincing competitor in the medium SUV segment, with its handsome, more traditiona­l SUV looks and impressive levels of quality.

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 ?? Photos / Damien O’Carroll, supplied ??
Photos / Damien O’Carroll, supplied

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