The Field

Motoring

This cheery, good-value SUV certainly cleaned up for its Romanian manufactur­er – so would it benefit from a revamp? Charlie Flindt reports

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The Duster has done fantastica­lly well for Dacia, quickly earning a reputation for value, simplicity and considerab­le off-road competence. So when the time came for a revamp, Dacia must have had to think long and hard. What could it do to its little 4x4 to ensure that reputation wasn’t lost?

Initial impression­s are good: it’s still definitely a Duster, but there have been subtle styling tweaks to make it look a bit more sophistica­ted. It’s amazing what a slight reshape of the bumpers and grille can do.

As soon as you jump in, one interior change is immediatel­y obvious: the seat. It’s comfortabl­e – the old one was a shocker. Other revisions are more subtle, but – like the exterior changes – make the layout feel much more up to date. But a proper rest for the left foot would be handy and the switch for cruise control and speed limiter are oddly placed down behind the handbrake.

On the move, the Duster is a mixed bag. The petrol engine is a tad weedy on the road, with fifth gear feeling like an overdrive and sixth completely useless. The handling is reasonable, and the controls are fingertip light. Off road, the Dacia seems happier, with first and second gear covering most situations – there’s no low range in the fourwheel-drive gearbox.

You can’t help worrying about the strength of some of the drivetrain and suspension components, which look slightly vulnerable. And the exhaust still snakes under the rear diff, although it has been beefed up considerab­ly compared to the old one. The Dacia gets bonus points for having a full-sized spare wheel and sensible (that is, cheap) tyres.

We had a couple of issues that suggest build quality isn’t what it could be: a brakesyste­m warning light popped on at one stage but the teenagers’ IT cure (“Turn it off, turn it on, job’s a good ’un, problem gone!”) soon sorted that out. And the engine speed stayed high for a second after lifting off the accelerato­r pedal. Once upon a time, one would have lubricated the throttle cable but such things don’t exist anymore. All I know was that it made me sound like an over-revving hoon. Or a confused pensioner.

But there’s something else not quite right about the latest Duster, and you have to wind back a couple of paragraphs to comments about ‘speed limiters’ and ‘cruise control’. Cast your eyes over the dashboard again. There’s a fancy sat-nav that beeps at you if you’re over the speed limit. (Apparently – never happened to me, of course.) There’s air con, and heated electrical door mirrors, and parking cameras, and all-round electric windows, and – well, you get the idea.

True, my test car was ‘Comfort’ spec and there’s now a lot of fancy kit available, but it comes at a price. It is still undercutti­ng a lot of its more mainstream rivals but not as jawdroppin­gly as it used to. The philosophy of cheap’n’cheerful has been lost. It strikes me that Dacia has got to beware of moving the Duster too far up the price range. The last thing we need is another convention­al SUV.

It is still undercutti­ng a lot of its rivals but the philosophy of cheap’n’cheerful has been lost

 ??  ?? Top: a reshaped bumper and grille have made the Duster look more sophistica­ted. Above, left: the dashboard offers a fancy sat-nav, air con, parking cameras and more. Above right: the writer found the seats comfortabl­e
Top: a reshaped bumper and grille have made the Duster look more sophistica­ted. Above, left: the dashboard offers a fancy sat-nav, air con, parking cameras and more. Above right: the writer found the seats comfortabl­e
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