Audi has given its RS4 Avant performance estate a facelift, including a reshaped grille and flared wheel arches, just two years after the current generation was launched. The mild redesign follows on from the recent refresh of the standard A4 and is limited mostly to a revised front end design and enhanced interior technology. The RS4’s front grille, bumper and lower splitter have been overhauled to further distance the performance variant from the standard model and bring it into line with the new RS6 Avant, which sports a notably more aggressive stance than the outgoing RS4. The gloss black honeycomb grille featured across Audi Sport’s range of top-rung RS models has been designed without a frame to sit flush with the bumper. The model’s LED headlights have also been reshaped and can now be specified with darkened bezels. As is tradition with Audi’s sportier models, the wheel arches are substantially flared to accommodate wider wheels and tyres, the RS4 measuring a full 30mm wider overall than the standard A4 at the front and rear. Inside, the facelifted model receives a new 10.1in infotainment touchscreen, equipped with Audi’s new MMI acoustic response technology, in place of the outgoing car’s rotary controller. A new digital instrument panel can display drive system component temperatures, g-forces, tyre pressures, power output, lap times and acceleration measurements. It also features a shift light display to assist the driver with gearchange timings. There are no changes to the RS4’s turbocharged 2.9-litre V6, which still produces 444bhp and 443lb ft – enough to give the car a 0-62mph time of 4.1sec and top speed of up to 174mph. The new RS4 Avant will make its public debut at this weekend’s DTM season finale at the Hockenheimring, ahead of sales beginning later this month. UK pricing is yet to be confirmed, but a European starting price of €81,400 suggests we’re likely to see a slight increase over the current model’s £67,585 price
Origin: Audi updates RS4 Avant with more aggressive styling for 2020
Motorcycle Review: 2019 Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT SE
2019 Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT SEKawasaki St-Hippolyte, Quebec — For those motorcycle engineers looking to test suspension systems, let me offer you a bit of time- and cost-saving advice. There’s no need to create complicated chassis dynos to replicate all the cracks, crevices and undulations the world’s roads will throw at your new products. Nor do you need to construct, as so many of you have done, multi-faceted test tracks around the world, their roadways emulating the most troubled tarmacs — the most nefarious reputed to be Belgian cobblestone — on the planet. And there’s absolutely no need to trek all the way to the far-flung steppes of Siberia to find pavement perdition. Nope, all you gotta do is plunk your bike in Quebec’s Laurentians and you’re good to go torture testing.Don’t bother asking specifically where because pretty much anywhere will do. St-Jerome is all huge frost heaves and giant craters. Estoril specializes in longitudinal cracks that will swallow a chopper front tire. And Lord, by the time you hit Saint Alphonse Rodriguez — you know the locals take their religion seriously when they name their town after a medieval Spanish Jesuit priest — it feels like Quebec’s highway department is deliberately trying to bend rims. If it’s north of Montreal and west of Trois Rivieres, you’re pretty much guaranteed it’s the worst road in the world. This, of course, makes La Belle Province the perfect place to test a motorcycle whose major year-over-year revision is enhanced suspension, which, if you have not yet guessed what I have been leading up to, perfectly describes Kawasaki’s Versys 1000 LT SE.Now, the Versys 1000 has always had a lot going for it — a smooth, silky 1,043-cc four-cylinder engine, excellent fairing protection and lithe handling. And, truth be told, there is a little more to 2019’s updates than just suspension improvement, an entire raft of new electronic goodies added this year, stretching from cruise control system and automatic cornering lights (that shine brighter the more you lean over) to upgraded traction control, “intelligent” anti-lock brakes and something called Kawasaki Corner Management Function. The big news, however the only thing anyone is talking about is Kawasakis Electronic Controlled Suspension. The same kind of adjustable suspension seen on higher-end BMWs, Kawasakis version is particularly sophisticated, but, after you set those basic settings, the LT continues to monitor the suspensions every movement and makes minute adjustments every millisecond. In other words, even after you set your desired ride quality, KECS continues to alter the suspension parameters according to speed and bump size to optimize ride and/or handling. Too trick!So, how effective is it?Very, in fact, the KECS upgrade completely worthy of the many accolades its garnering. Sport mode, for instance, is perfect for smooth, twisty roads, but thanks to KECSs ability to constantly alter resistance does make it somewhat passable even in La Belle Province. Road proved much more sympathetic, still firm enough that one could play silly buggers but without the forearm jarring compression damping. Rain, meanwhile dialled the suspension all the way back, providing the softest ride, though the lack of rebound damping did have it occasionally flouncing about like an overstuffed 1969 Ford F-150 riding on original shocks.All that said, knowledgeable bikers will probably be ready to put pen to paper or, more accurately, fingertips to keyboard telling me that switching to Road and Rain mode also decreases the engines power output/throttle response; not so much in former, but dramatically so (about 25 per cent) in the latter.So, what do you do if you want the super squishy Rain mode suspension married to Sport modes maximum power? Well, you simply toggle to Kawasakis custom Rider setting that lets you meld superbike throttle response with Gold Wing suppleness. OK, that may be doable, but better perhaps is to, as I did, marry Sports engine and traction control calibrations with softish compression damping, but firmer rebound damping. Then I just left KECS alone.And therein lies the sole caveat about Kawasakis indeed, everyones electronic suspension system. Once youve gotten over the novelty of flipping between modes or constantly customizing your suspension, one tends to find one baseline adjustment and just leave it there. Oh, maybe a few inveterate button pushers continue to juggle their ride quality, but most people just find their favourite compromise and then be done with it.What they will use, however, on a much more frequent basis indeed, what makes all this electronic control truly worthwhile is the electronic spring preload adjustment. Indeed, it is so frequently fiddled with that it has its own button on the left handlebar, the spring preload adjuster allows the rider to compensate for different loads a passenger, luggage, etc. at the flip of a switch. Considering how
Origin: Motorcycle Review: 2019 Kawasaki Versys 1000 LT SE
Best lease deals of the week: Economical petrols
Leasing can be an affordable, practical route into having your own private car, but it’s not always easy to tell the good deals from the duds. The experts at our sister magazine What Car? work hard to find you the best pay-monthly schemes, taking into account mileage allowance, montly outlay, contract length and initial deposit. We’ll be bringing you the best deals they find from a different segment each week. This week, it’s economical petrols: 1. Suzuki Celerio 1.0 SZ2 £929 deposit, £155 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The featherweight Celerio has real-world economy of around 57mpg. It’s also good to drive, with a surprising turn of speed when the road opens up, although it’s more at home in town. 2. Volkswagen Up 1.0 Move Up £878 deposit, £146 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year The Up can wring more than 53 miles from a gallon of the hard stuff. That’s a real-world figure, too. Granted, the Celerio betters it by a remarkable 4mpg but the Up looks and feels classier and its image is stronger. 3. Suzuki Baleno 1.0 Boosterjet SZ-T £1317 deposit, £220 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Suzuki does it again, this time with the larger, Fiesta-sized Baleno, which can do up to 55mpg. It’s an unsung hero you overlook at your cost since there’s more kit here and a bigger boot than most rivals offer. 4. Seat Ibiza 1.0 SE Technology £884 deposit, £147 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Seat’s sharp-looking supermini ekes 54 miles out of a gallon of unleaded. Impressive stuff, but this car also knows how to play, thanks to a responsive engine that pulls impressively from low revs and an unruffled ride. 5. Kia Picanto 1.0 1 5DR £700 deposit, £117 per month, 48 months, 8000 miles per year Not the all-rounder that the Ibiza can claim to be but still a well-packaged city runabout and, with 53mpg on the cards, frugal with it. It’s a keeper, too, with a seven-year warranty that rivals can only dream about. For more great personal business lease deals visit What Car?
Origin: Best lease deals of the week: Economical petrols
New BMW X5 M and X6 M gain 616bhp Competition variants
BMW M has revealed the third generation of its performance SUV flagships, the X5 M and coupé-styled X6 M, with both available in Competition form for the first time. Detailed ahead of their public debut at November’s LA motor show, both are set for a market launch commencing in April next year. A spokesperson has confirmed that the UK will only be able to order the Competition variants, priced from £110,610 for the X5 M and £113,310 for the X6 M. They will rival the Porsche Cayenne and Cayenne Coupé in Turbo forms, and are both powered by BMW M’s now familiar twin-turbocharged 4.4-litre V8. The standard X5 M and X6 M put out 592bhp, which is 25bhp more than both outgoing models. However, in keeping with the tradition set first by the latest M5, the Competition models boost this output to 616bhp. Torque is pegged at 553lb ft in all variants. The motor in both is mated to an eight-speed automatic gearbox with all-wheel drive and an Active M differential, said to help deliver the power through the wheels over any terrain. BMW claims super-stiff engine mountings boost response and refinement, while the engine oil supply system has been designed to cope with extensive track use. The result is a 0-62mph time quoted at 3.9sec for both cars, and a 0-124mph time of 13.7sec for the X5 M and 13.5sec for the X6 M. The Competition models drop the 0-62mph sprint down to 3.8sec, while the 0-124mph sprint is 13.4sec for the X5 M and 13.2sec for the X6 M. All models hit the same 155mph limiter unless you spec the optional M Driver’s Package, which raises the top speed to 180mph. Conversely, BMW quotes between 21.7mpg and 22.6mpg, depending on model and spec, with CO2 figures ranging from 284-296g/km. Competition models also feature the M Sport exhaust upgrade as standard (it’s optional on the regular cars), which is said to offer even greater aural thrills than the base M models’ already uprated exhaust system. This being a full-fat M model, there’s also substantial chassis upgrades. Alongside the Active M differential, the xDrive all-wheel drive gives a rear-biased power delivery, with even more power shifted to the rear in the 4WD Sport drive mode. Standard-fit adaptive suspension with electronic dampers and an active roll stabilisation system are drafted in, as is Servotronic steering with a specific M tuning. The X5 M and X6 M’s braking system also offers two settings for pedal feel. Both the X5 M and X6 M benefit from the usual array of M-specific design details, including larger air intakes, ‘gills’ on the front wing, drag-reducing exterior mirrors, a rear spoiler and a diffuser element surrounding the four-exit tailpipes. Competition models add specific M light alloy wheels (21in front, 22in rear) and unique badging. The interior features a host of new menu functions to allow extensive configuration of the drive modes. Specific set-ups can be saved and accessed via M buttons on the wheel, while M-specific instrument readouts and M performance seats complete the roster of changes. Competition cars get unique leather upholstery,
Origin: New BMW X5 M and X6 M gain 616bhp Competition variants
News Roundup: Tesla cop car fail, backwards-facing Chevy pickup and when turkeys attack
Welcome to our weekly round-up of the biggest breaking stories on Driving.ca from this past week. Get caught up and ready to get on with the weekend, because it’s hard keeping pace in a digital traffic jam.Here’s what you missed while you were away.High-speed chase ends when Tesla police cruiser battery diesCalifornia police claim to be pleased with the performance of their fleet’s Tesla Model S cruiser, despite the fact that it recently outright quit on them in the middle of a high-speed chase. According to reports by The Mercury News, Fremont, California officer Jesse Hartman had to radio in during the pursuit of a “felony vehicle” to request another squad car join the chase as his Tesla was showing just 10 km of battery range. Gas-powered vehicles took over the pursuit only to give it up as the driver escalated their level of recklessness. The Tesla, which had to stop in San Jose to charge, had apparently been through two full shifts without a charge, prior to the chase. Video footage of this backwards-facing Chevy truck in action delights the worldBy installing its body onto its chassis in reverse and swapping interior features like the dash, wheels and pedals from the front to the rear of the cabin, a Massachusetts man has successfully created a very cool and very confusing vehicle. “There’s Ron in his backward-facing pickup truck,” says the man filming the unique build drive down the road in the above video. Ron’s full-size Chevrolet C/K 1500 is completely street-legal, with turn indicators where the headlights should be and front wheels that turn from under the bed of the truck. Watch Ron and his curiosity take a left at the end of the video. Ontario man reps himself in court and wins case over speeding ticket despite multiple errorsWhen you hear stories of people representing themselves in court, they don’t usually end like this. An Ontario man who decided against using a lawyer to help convince a judge that he shouldn’t have to pay a fine issued for allegedly driving 107 km/h in a 70 km/h zone has somehow come out on top despite having made multiple rather large missteps during the proceedings. The main issue: the man forgot to deny the allegations of speeding during the correct period of the trial. Luckily for him, his errors weren’t the only ones. The judge and justice of the peace also goofed the proceedings in several technical ways, ultimately resulting in the conviction being voided. There’s a lesson here, but it’s probably not one you want to learn. New Hyundai pickup to be built on ladder-frameIf executive rumours can be believed, Hyundai’s heavily anticipated new pickup truck will be built on a ladder-frame platform, and not on a unibody like the brand’s SUVs, as initially believed. Hyundai’s Australian CEO recently revealed the news, telling an Aussie publication that Kia may be sharing the ladder-frame development action for a pickup product of their own. “We’re going down that pathway and we’re working towards it,” the CEO told Which Car. “We just have to make sure that when it arrives, it’s a bloody ute.”Motorcyclist faces off against angry turkey at intersection in Toronto suburbIt’s nearly Thanksgiving and the birds are fighting back. A motorcyclist riding through the city of Whitby, Ontario, was confronted by a large male turkey who walked out into the middle of the intersection, circled the man and his bike several times, and then began to attack, leaping and kicking at his leg. The man defended himself in highly humane way, extending his leg to discourage the bird from attacking further. The hilarious incident was caught on camera by a fellow driver, giving us all something to be thankful for this Thanksgiving season.
Origin: News Roundup: Tesla cop car fail, backwards-facing Chevy pickup and when turkeys attack
Nissan ‘to review future’ of Sunderland plant in case of no-deal Brexit
Nissan could close its Sunderland factory if the UK leaves the European Union without a trade deal, according to reports in the Financial Times. The newspaper, citing three people with knowledge of the matter, reports a no-deal Brexit could prompt the Japanese firm to stop making the Qashqai SUV at the site – which could ultimately lead to the closure of the plant. In November 2016, Nissan pledged to build the hugely popular Qashqai in the UK, after then-chairman Carlos Ghosn received assurances from then-prime minister Theresa May that the firm’s operations would be protected from the impact of Brexit – but the agreement was reportedly contingent on a ‘soft’ Brexit with an EU trade deal. The FT claims that, under a global review Nissan has since undertaken, the Sunderland plant could be downsized or even closed if a no-deal Brexit makes it uncompetitive to ship cars from the site to the EU. Currently, Nissan also makes the Juke and Leaf models at Sunderland. In a statement issued to Autocar, Nissan said: “While we don’t comment on speculative scenarios, our plans for Qashqai production in Sunderland have not changed.” But the firm did warn that a no-deal Brexit could have a serious impact on British-based industry. It added: “Since 1986, the UK has been a production base for Nissan in Europe. Our British-based RD and design teams support the development of products made in Sunderland, specifically for the European market. “Frictionless trade has enabled the growth that has seen our Sunderland plant become the biggest factory in the history of the UK car industry, exporting more than half of its production to the EU. “Today we are among those companies with major investments in the UK who are still waiting for clarity on what the future trading relationship between the UK and the EU will look like. “As a sudden change from those rules to the rules of the WTO will have serious implications for British industry, we urge UK and EU negotiators to work collaboratively towards an orderly balanced Brexit that will continue to encourage mutually beneficial trade.” Current prime minister Boris Johnson has said he is committed to the UK leaving the EU on the currently scheduled date of 31 October regardless of whether a deal has been agreed. A no-deal Brexit would mean UK-built cars such as Nissan models made at Sunderland would be subject to tariffs when being shipped to Europe. But under a trade agreement between the EU and Japan, Nissan would be able to export models made in its home country into the EU without tariffs. That would potentially make it more profitable to make models for Europe in Japan rather than the UK. Earlier this year, Nissan reversed a decision to make the next-generation of the X-Trail SUV at Sunderland, citing Brexit concerns and the decline of diesel as reasons. The plant also recently lost the Infiniti Q30 and QX30, after Nissan decided to withdraw its premium sub-brand from Europe. It has also cut back a number of jobs at the plant as part of a global cost-cutting initiative. Nissan opened its Sunderland plant in 1986, and is believed to have invested more than £4 billion in it since then. The plant has recently been upgraded to prepare for the next-generation Juke crossover, which is due to go into production shortly. Honda is in the process of closing its Swindon factory, in a move it says is not primarily due to Brexit. But BMW and Toyota have warned they could switch production from the UK in the case of a no-deal
Origin: Nissan ‘to review future’ of Sunderland plant in case of no-deal Brexit
First Drive: 2020 Ferrari F8 Tributo
Maranello, Italy — I am absolutely thrilled. I built a Ferrari engine. A real, honest-to-God, no-it’s-not-a-plastic-1/8th-scale-model Ferrari engine or even a LEGO set. It was, in fact, an F154 V8, the same turbocharged monster that has powered the 488 these last four years and still powers the Tributo I will test in a few hours.Actually, the hardest thing I did was install a spark plug — a rare-as-hen’s-teeth NGK SILZKAR8HKS, by the way — but I did have to use a special tool. I also got to fit piston to cylinder liner — with the best ring compressing tool I‘ve ever sampled — and sintered caps to connecting rod. That may not sound like much and my specific engine may be just another abused class-demonstration block that will never internal combust in anger. But, I am completely taken by the moment nonetheless. I am in Maranello, I am in the Ferrari factory — in the very same classroom that all Ferrari techs learn their craft, no less — and I just torqued the rarest of rare double overhead camshaft head down. I am quite literally the kid in the candy shop, with minimal — after all, this is Italy — supervision. It might seem trivial. It is almost certainly pathetic. But I am tickled pink and I can’t wait to get back home to show off my “official” Ferrari meccanico overalls to my soon-to-be-jealous pals at Driving HQ. That is the magic of visiting Ferrari. No place in the automotive world is at once so thoroughly efficient and yet so steeped in history. Cloistered away inside a compound that holds the most modern of manufacturing plants is the little shop, well, let’s call it a hut in comparison to the new plant, where Mr. Ferrari and his small coterie of crazies assembled Testarossas. And what’s that over the there? Oh, that’s the barn he converted into an office to watch the F1 races he was too busy to attend. And, oh my Lord, is that… why, yes it is. A bust of Gilles Villeneuve — located on via Gilles Villeneuve, no less — that serves as a welcome to Ferrari’s famed Fiorano test track. Because, well, Gilles was reputedly Enzo’s favourite racer of all time. What I am trying to say is that, in a country that takes its legacy and heritage seriously, we are standing in its epicentre of hero worship. It’s impossible not to note that giants strode here.All of which makes the fact that the car we’re driving at Ferrari’s also-steeped-in-lore test facility — the F8 — is also called the Tributo. Quite literally, tribute. Officially, the new F8 is a tribute to Ferrari’s V8 — an engine that originated in the 308GTB — and the fact that it has now been the Engine Technology International magazine’s Engine of the Year four years running and, even more impressively, was voted the finest example of internal combustion of the last 20 years by the same organization. But — and I don’t know if it’s because I’ve just been elbows deep in a Ferrari engine block or because I like the new F8 so much — I can’t help but think that this new car is a tribute to Enzo and everything one man managed to create in the Middle of Nowhere, Italy.That’s because, after the sensibility of the 488 — a great car that made complete sense, but didn’t tug at the heartstrings quite as much as a Ferrari should — the F8 is a return to living large with eight Italian cylinders. It may be based on the same chassis and its engine a kissing cousin to the 488’s, but it’s louder, lighter and more than insouciant enough that it feels (almost) like the return of the 458.Steering, for instance, feels much sharper than the 488’s. Turn in is tight, no matter how tight the Italian switchback is, the front end, like the 458’s, sticking to a line like a 600-cc superbike. Try as I might — and, Lord knows, you know I tried — I just couldn’t get the front to understeer. That might have something to do with the tenaciousness of Italian tarmac or the tail-wagging nature of Fiorano’s turns, but the F8 stuck to the pavement like Donald Trump to inappropriate handshakes. Ferrari says the hardware isn’t changed — other than a smaller steering wheel that’s supposed to provide more feedback — and all the difference in feel is due to tuning changes in the suspension, steering and electronic differential. Torque vectoring at the rear, as we all know, has an enormous effect on steering precision at the front, which is why Ferrari engineers credit the e-diff with the greatest improvement. Whatever the case, if the upgrade — which, again, is substantial — is all tuning and finesse, where was this calibration engineer four years ago when the 488 was tamed into a benign McLaren.The engine behind is no less dramatic. What had been subdued is now overtly ferocious. Where the 488’s tone was an F flat, the F8 is an E major. Where other turbocharged V8s seem tamed — I’m looking at you, McLaren — and need, let’s call it aural augmentation, Ferrari’s V8 is all flat-crank, almost-as-vibrant-as-the-458 soul stirring. Sometime soon we will all be driving electric cars
Origin: First Drive: 2020 Ferrari F8 Tributo
Schwarzenegger sets Greta Thunberg up with Tesla Model 3 to Montreal
Tesla Model 3Tesla Climate activist and scolder of world leaders Greta Thunberg will be travelling to various North American events this month including one in Montreal in a Tesla Model 3, courtesy of none other than Arnold Schwarzenegger.The actor-turned-politician apparently made the offer after learning of her travel plans in Canada and the States during this leg of her climate crusade.While your author and many others associate Terminator and Predator movies with the former California governor, Schwarzenegger has lately been using his influence as a call to action on environmental issues. This friendship between Schwarzenegger and Thunberg may seem random, but the two have been on the same climate page for ages. The muscle-bound actor said he was starstruck after meeting the young activist earlier this year at an environmental summit in Vienna. Given his willingness to help her with her efforts right now on this side of the pond, its safe to say the sixteen-year-old made quite an impression on him.Schwarzenegger isnt new to the electric car scene, having had a Hummer H1 converted to electric power by an outfit called Kreisel Electric. Those of us with long memories will recall the actor was one of the first (if not the first) to take delivery of a civilian Humvee when they were released to the general public back in the 1990s. An electric conversion, then, ties the mans then-and-now interests together very well.After taking the world to task in a speech delivered at the UN last week, Thunberg continued to Montreal where she lead an estimated 500,000 people on that days climate strike. These events, held around the world, are intended to highlight climate change and spur people into taking real
Origin: Schwarzenegger sets Greta Thunberg up with Tesla Model 3 to Montreal
Mazda 2 hatch upgraded with mild-hybrid tech
The Mazda 2 will gain mild-hybrid power as part of a facelift for the compact hatch, which also includes design tweaks and technology upgrades. The Japanese firm’s Ford Fiesta and Hyundai i20 rival will retain the 1.5-litre Skyactiv-G petrol engine, but is now boosted by a belt-integrated starter/generator on all manual models. It will be offered in two stages of tune, with a 74bhp version on entry level SE-L models, and a 89bhp powertrain for SE-L Nav, Sport Nav and GT Sport Nav trims. The manual versions produce 94-95g/km of CO2, depending on trim level, with a WLTP-certified combined fuel economy of 53.4mpg. Mazda cites a number of tweaks to improve the handling of its supermini, including a new urethane top mount in the rear dampers, revised power steering and the introduction of a G-Vectoring Control Plus system, which uses the brakes to aid cornering. The design changes include a revised grille with a new design closer to the Mazda 3, a wider wing, new bumper and revised LED headlights. Inside, the dashboard trim, air vents and other features have been tweaked, with new-shape seats designed to offer more comfort. Mazda also claims the use of new damping materials and the reduction in the gap around the B-pillar reduce noise and improve refinement for those inside. The entry level SE-L Mazda 2 will cost £15,795, and includes rear parking sensors, 15in alloy wheels and climate control. As well as the more powerful engine, SE-L Nav models and above gain the Mazda Connect navigation system, which is compatible with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, and driver assistance features including brake assist and lane-keeping assist. SE-L Nav models start from £16,610. For £17,310, Sport Nav models add 16in alloy wheels, a gloss black grille, rear privacy glass, chrome exhausts and keyless entry. The top-rung GT Sport Nav models feature a reversing camera, leather seats, a head-up display, and heated front seats and steering wheel. Such models start from £18,110 for manual models, and £19,370 with an automatic gearbox. The revised Mazda 2 will go on sale in the UK in
Origin: Mazda 2 hatch upgraded with mild-hybrid tech
New Ford Puma: pricing and spec details for SUV confirmed
Ford has confirmed UK pricing of its new Puma SUV ahead of the first examples being delivered to customers in January. The rebirth of the Puma name as a sporty high-riding model will see it start from £20,845 in Titanium trim, with Ford not initially looking to offer a lower-spec variant. It comes as standard with features not usually confined to ‘base’ models, such as lumbar massage front seats and wireless phone charging, plus lane-keep assist and pre-collision assist with pedestrian detection. However, Ford won’t be taking orders for this model until the start of next year. Instead, a number of First Edition variants are being offered first for January deliveries. The Puma Titanium First Edition starts from £22,295 and gets intelligent adaptive cruise control, a rear-view camera, heated seats and a heated steering wheel. It’s powered by a 123bhp version of the 1.0-litre Ecoboost mild-hybrid three-cylinder petrol engine. Also offered is a Puma ST-Line X, which gets the option of a 153bhp version of the same engine alongside the above unit, adding an exterior bodykit and sporting cabin details, sports suspension, alloy pedals, a digital instrument cluster and LED headlamps. The initial First Edition adds 18in alloys, an electric tailgate and a 10 speaker BO audio system to that tally, and is priced from £25,195. Finally, a fully-loaded ST-Line X First Edition Plus, solely available with the 153bhp unit, adds 19in wheels and a panoramic roof from £27,345. The lower-powered unit comes with the mild-hybrid system in everything but the base Titanium trim, reducing its CO2 output from 103g/km to 96g/km. Both engines come with a six-speed manual gearbox as standard. The model, which sees the small coupe of the late nineties morphing into a sporty compact crossover, is subtly but effectively different from its established SUV rivals. Officially, the company describes the Puma as an “SUV-inspired crossover”, with its three standout virtues claimed to be “seductive styling”, ingenious rear stowage and the new 48V mild-hybrid petrol drivetrain. The body’s flowing surfaces have been developed under what designer George Saridakis labels an “anti-wedge” policy. What he calls “separated” headlights and tail-lights are also a move against the current trends for “joining everything up”, Saridakis citing the industry fashion for full-width light bars across a vehicle’s tail. The new Puma is based on Ford’s existing B global small car architecture, the same as the Fiesta, but the platform’s inherent flexibility has allowed the Puma to be sized very specifically. It is just 30mm higher than the new Fiesta and the front seating position is raised by the same amount. This is still a compact vehicle, but it is usefully longer than the Fiesta as well as wider, with a wider track. And it squeezes a surprising amount of interior space out of a vehicle that’s smaller than the Focus. Saridakis says he and the project’s chief engineer, Norbert Steffens, worked in the styling studio with “cardboard and tape” trying to extract the maximum luggage space from the Puma structure. This crossover has a claimed 456 litres of boot space, whereas the Focus has just 370 litres. They achieved this by way of what Ford calls a “lower load box”. Cut through the boot floor, the box is a useful 80 litres in capacity and even has a removable plug in the bottom to allow it to be washed out. The Puma’s rigid boot floor can also be fitted in three different ways: low, on top of the load box; at a mid-height, which gives generous hidden storage; and clipped out of the way, by being attached to the backs of the rear seats. Steffens demonstrated that, with the boot floor clipped out of the way, it is possible to load items such as a golf club bag vertically in the back of the Puma thanks to the extra load height offered by the box. Even the parcel shelf has been rethought as a lightweight fabric cover attached to the tailgate itself, which avoids the need to stow an awkward load cover. From an engineering point of view, it’s the Puma’s new 48V mild-hybrid drivetrain that stands out. This is based around an updated version of Ford’s 1.0-litre Ecoboost petrol unit and replaces the conventional alternator with an 11.5kW integrated starter/ generator (called a BISG). It will come in 123bhp and 153bhp guises, with the more powerful version using a seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox. The BISG is connected to the engine via a belt and works in two directions: it can be used when braking and coasting to recover energy (which is stored in a small lithium ion battery) and it can also assist the engine during acceleration. Ford says the hybrid assistance has allowed the engine’s compression ratio to be lowered and a larger turbocharger to be fitted, as the BISG can mitigate turbo lag and keep the engine turning faster. Performance at lower speeds is especially enhanced, says Steffens, with as much as 50% more torque on
Origin: New Ford Puma: pricing and spec details for SUV confirmed