RE: Volvo V60 Polestar: Review

RE: Volvo V60 Polestar: Review

Wednesday 29th October 2014

Volvo V60 Polestar: Review

Stylish and understated hedonism ideal for winter roads - Polestar's V60 is a proper(ly) fast Volvo



As you might expect, turning off the ESC in a Volvo isn't especially easy. But rather in contrast to the general tone of the SMMT day the Swede running the Polestar fleet was insistent, despite the fact it the Millbrook hill route was drenched. Or perhaps because of this.

Transverse turbo six is defiantly unconventional
Transverse turbo six is defiantly unconventional
Anyway, before we were allowed to turn a wheel he made sure all electronic nannies - there are rather a lot of them too - were switched off, the better to enjoy the considerable chassis and engine work Polestar has lavished on the otherwise sensible Volvo V60. The basic message then? It might look stylishly straight-laced but within lurks a proper hedonist. How very Swedish.

We've already driven the 350hp Polestar V60 on the launch event and detailed the work done on the car. To summarise though this is a lot more than the Volvo approved 329hp chip upgrade you could get for the standard 304hp T6. This feels like a properly resolved tuner car, the relationship between Polestar and the mothership perhaps similar to that between AMG and Mercedes before the 1993 buy-out. Meaning Polestar is happy to pick and choose designer-label aftermarket parts like Ohlins dampers and Brembo brakes a mainstream manufacturer might otherwise skimp on.

All-in
And you get the full package too, making that intimidating £49,755 asking price exactly that. The Audi S4 Avant that seems the most obvious rival is 'only' £40,610 but you only need add £1,400 Super Sports seats, carbon inlays, Audi Drive Select, Dynamic Steering, £1,150 19-inch wheels, active dampers and the essential £620 Sports Differential to be knocking on the door of a similar price. Audi even charges £2,320 for all the driver assist systems and radar controlled cruise that Volvo - conforming to type - considers bare necessities in a car of this class.

Rock solid build, cool design - Scandi chic!
Rock solid build, cool design - Scandi chic!
Which is a defiantly un-German way of doing things. And sets the refreshing tone that runs throughout the car.

It's only when you get in something different that you realise quite how locked down the premium car segment is to the Teutonic way of thinking. Flit from Audis to BMWs and Mercs and you know the formula. The Volvo feels very different, and more cool for it.

There are imperfections in the V60's interior - fiddly buttons, irritatingly high seating position and disappointingly compromised visibility among them - but overall there's a sense of style, quality and integrity to put any German rival to shame. Little touches like the tactile Alcantara on the inside of the wheel and translucent gear selector smack of attention to detail that's impressive for a car with a 750-unit production run.

Wheels lovely; mind those kerbs though...
Wheels lovely; mind those kerbs though...
Enough on the soft furnishings - there's engineering to match, most noticeably in the chassis. Just how much stiffer is the Polestar compared with the standard V60? 80 per cent, at least in spring rate. That's astonishing. And obvious - first impressions of the ride are that it's not shy. The dampers are at least a match for this and a lesson, once again, in how quality passive dampers can show the multi-mode 'adaptive' equivalents a thing or two when it comes to body control and chassis balance. There are (deeply buried) clicker adjusters too, if you fancy a fettle.

Swedish meatballs
Much like the Ohlins-damped Megane Trophy-R, the Polestar has a busy chassis unafraid to permit lots of vertical movement. Meaning it can get a bit jiggly at times. But there's real class here too, the buttery smoothness and lack of stiction in the dampers proving body movement is nothing to be afraid of if you can control it properly. It's therefore surprisingly busy down a bumpy road but the wheels always feel resolutely tied down to the road surface, maximising cornering grip and the traction abilities of the Haldex 5 four-wheel drive. Given there's a massive lump of six-cylinder engine unfashionably slung across the front of the car understeer is commendably well contained and under power the Polestar maintains defiant neutrality. What was that about national stereotypes again?

It's not like the Volvo estates we used to know
It's not like the Volvo estates we used to know
It's devastatingly effective on a greasy autumnal road though, the boosty kick of that engine and the characterful snarl as it piles on the revs all adding to the sense that this is a car of charisma and character put together by folk who really know what they're doing. The variable weighting to the wheel, its low gearing and lack of lock are perhaps slight failings but the murmurs of feedback are welcome and the control weights are all very well harmonised. Much like the spec, the driving experience suggests the full package. Thirst - 30s at best, low 20s when pressing on - and the perception that a six-speed auto is a bit 'old tech' in this day and age are going to count against it though.

How best to sum it all up? Sensibly mad would seem fitting, the fit, finish and sense of quality plus individuality factor all very much counting in its favour. Will it win many over from the default German choices? Unlikely. But for those seeking something distinctive and characterful it's a bold choice and a very impressive first effort as Polestar evolves from race shop and accessories-based tuner to proper in-house performance brand.


VOLVO V60 POLESTAR
Engine:
 2,953cc 6-cyl turbo
Gearbox: 6-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
Power (hp): 350@5,250rpm
Torque (lb ft): 369@3,000-4,750rpm
0-62mph: 5.0 secs
Top speed: 155mph (limited)
Kerbweight: 1,834kg 
MPG: 27.7 (NEDC combined)
CO2: 237g/km
Price: £49,775

 

 

 

 

   
   
   
   
Author
Discussion

RenesisEvo

Original Poster:

3,606 posts

219 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Absolutely love it, and glad to hear it's no lemon - I'll have mine in Q-car grey, please.

Frimley111R

15,615 posts

234 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
I'll have mine in the get-the-fk-outta-my-way-blue hehe

Ruskins

221 posts

121 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
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Love this! Great combination of sensible/mental

S10GTA

12,673 posts

167 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Yes please.

redwedge

2,421 posts

166 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
I'm sure it's a great car, but fifty grands worth of great?

eybic

9,212 posts

174 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
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I'm in love with the colour, it looks soooooo good in the flesh.

dlockhart

434 posts

172 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
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It looks understated compared to some of the German rivals, center console could have done with a bit of design overhall, the question is: Would I choose this over its rivals, the truth is id probably fall in line and by the audi like all the other sheep

MogulBoy

2,932 posts

223 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
"80 per cent stiffer spring rates".... I don't doubt that they will have tried hard to finesse the suspension on the Polestar but try before you buy would be my advice. The base V60 D4 R-Design Manual that I rented in the summer was one of the 'worst riding' cars I have ever driven and it took the edge of what an otherwise interesting package - albeit one that lacked the performance that *might* have justified (or at least provided an excuse for) such a harsh ride.

Dan Trent

1,866 posts

168 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
MogulBoy said:
"80 per cent stiffer spring rates".... I don't doubt that they will have tried hard to finesse the suspension on the Polestar but try before you buy would be my advice. The base V60 D4 R-Design Manual that I rented in the summer was one of the 'worst riding' cars I have ever driven and it took the edge of what an otherwise interesting package - albeit one that lacked the performance that *might* have justified (or at least provided an excuse for) such a harsh ride.
We'll report back on this as we've just had the Polestar swapped for a 'standard' R-Design V40 T5. FWIW I'd say the Polestar set-up IS stiff but it's stiff with purpose and finesse rather than just wound down to 'feel sporty' as budget dictates many mainstream products are. That Renault charges £2K extra for comparable Ohlins dampers on the Megane Trophy offers an indication of the hardware investment that's gone into this car and the quality of the kit in question.

I'd concur with the try before you buy though - and please report back if you ever get a chance to test the Polestar because it'd be interesting to hear how you think the ride compares.

Cheers!

Dan

daytona365

1,773 posts

164 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Looks and seems pretty neat, but Volvo have no history of cars with good handling finesse.........Power on it's own is not enough I'm afraid.

After_Shock

8,751 posts

220 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
MogulBoy said:
"80 per cent stiffer spring rates".... I don't doubt that they will have tried hard to finesse the suspension on the Polestar but try before you buy would be my advice. The base V60 D4 R-Design Manual that I rented in the summer was one of the 'worst riding' cars I have ever driven and it took the edge of what an otherwise interesting package - albeit one that lacked the performance that *might* have justified (or at least provided an excuse for) such a harsh ride.
Unlike the R-Design this has vastly superior dampers which ride much much better over all despite the stiffer springs. The R-Designs are crashy but drive one for a week and jump in an S line Audi or an M Sport BMW and the R-Design is far from the stiffest on the market.

Axionknight

8,505 posts

135 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
daytona365 said:
Looks and seems pretty neat, but Volvo have no history of cars with good handling finesse.........Power on it's own is not enough I'm afraid.
Polestar do though.

I love it - but I can't justify buying one with the house purchase/refurb underway, but really want one, my last Volvo and my current one have been excellent, I'll be keeping an eye on this for a couple of years time. Big engined Volvos drop in value fairly quickly, I'm guessing the limited run will shore up values, but here's hoping!

Oz83

688 posts

139 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
I'd love to own one of these just for the sake of being different (well not here in Sweden, obviously) but 50 grand? fifty thousand pounds? Is it April already?




The Don of Croy

5,992 posts

159 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
I'll wait for five or so years when the market will (perhaps) have shredded the value and hopefully pick one up for <£8k as a winter car.

At least someone is trying to meet the teutons head on.

Bigchiefmuffin

46 posts

202 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Nice idea in theory, but not so sure how it has turned out in practice. High price and high CO2's will kill the residuals.

Suspect you would really have to be determined NOT to buy one of the more obvious Teutonic rivals for this to be on your shopping list.

daytona365

1,773 posts

164 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Thought they were teutons ?

csampo

236 posts

195 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Oz83 said:
I'd love to own one of these just for the sake of being different (well not here in Sweden, obviously) but 50 grand? fifty thousand pounds? Is it April already?
It is a lot of money, but then to me it is more desirable than a similarly priced S4 (at least once the equivalent extras from the Audi option list are added). This Volvo has (apparently) well integrated six pot Brembo's and Ohlins dampers; serious kit which is joyfully silly on an estate car.

Oddball RS

1,757 posts

218 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Looks like a much more expensive Insignia VXR Estate to me, and its auto only.

anonymous-user

54 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Oddball RS said:
Looks like a much more expensive Insignia VXR Estate to me, and its auto only.
Spend some time in a Volvo, they put more attention to detail into the glove box handle than GM lavish on the entire st box car they turn out. Then actually take a look at the components and fixtures and fastenings that matter once the car is outside warranty and it's more of the same. The Insignia is a disposable junior management box that has had a decent engine installed, but the low rent fundamental design and build will always show through. Volvo actually gave a st when they designed the V60 so it's not going to be a one trick pony as an ownership prospect. Modern Volvos are everything Audi have managed to convince people they are.

-crookedtail-

1,562 posts

190 months

Wednesday 29th October 2014
quotequote all
Loving this, maybe in a few years time once they've depreciated enough for me biggrin

Although agree with the poster about the central console/dash. Never really like it in these, looks a bit of a mess imho!!