RE: Volvo V90 D5 PowerPulse AWD R-Design: Driven

RE: Volvo V90 D5 PowerPulse AWD R-Design: Driven

Thursday 23rd March 2017

Volvo V90 D5 PowerPulse AWD R-Design: Driven

Daft name, nice car - Volvo's big estate offers a pleasingly Swedish riposte to the German mainstream



Whichever of the German big three you're most familiar with the chances are you'll have a sense of continuity about those everyday interfaces, whether it's selecting your favourite radio station, switching driver modes or navigating the ... nav. Sure, the systems in your latest Audi/BMW/Mercedes are probably a little fancier than the previous one, the graphics snazzier and the range of options bigger. But if you've progressed through two or three generations of cars from the same brand it'll all feel familiar soon enough.

Feeling the need for something different? Been a while since you last sat in a Volvo? You're in for a surprise. A nice one at that.

That Volvo has stuck by the luxurious big estate car format while the world (and many of its customers, via the related XC90) went full SUV is something we rather like at PH. From the moment we first saw the V90 there was a collective 'oooh!' from around the office, the familiarity of a big, boxy Volvo estate car oddly refreshing in this day and age. Mainly because, although unmistakably 'premium' and pricey, it manages to present this without the pushiness we understand from the Germans. Which is a roundabout way of saying you can drive a flash car without rubbing anyone's nose in it. It's a big, flash Volvo. Yet at the same time just a big Volvo. Again, oddly refreshing. If you really want to go properly green wellies there's the Cross Country version too, oddly the only variant available in the UK with the 320hp T6 turbo/supercharged petrol engine.


Welcome to the jungle
Ultimately this is a big Volvo with a little engine, it has to be said. Taking in the headlines of the spec a 2.0-litre four-cylinder diesel against nearly two tonnes doesn't sound like a fair fight. OK, so we live in an age of three-cylinder 3 Series and all that. But even the clever PowerPulse system - a self-refilling air chamber that primes the turbo for instant spool-up - sounds like it'll be struggling against the V90's bulk. 235hp and 354lb ft of torque through a Haldex all-wheel drive and eight-speed automatic powertrain are respectable though and, for the V90's remit, plenty to make respectable progress. Whether that quite justifies carbon fibre trim and a Sports ESC setting are another matter. 'Dark Flame Birch' sounds a little more ... Swedish.

One of the V90's quirkier features is a transverse leaf-spring set-up for the rear suspension, the better for packaging apparently. Well, if it's good enough for Corvettes... Sadly on the international launch all the cars were on the optional Active Four-C Chassis, which features adaptive dampers all round and air springs on the rear. This is a burly £1,500 extra, self-levelling on the rear adding another £950 for those with REALLY fat Labradors. Or, perhaps, a pimped out caravan. We're a 'posh supermarket car park reference' away from full house on the Volvo stereotypes there aren't we. Stay alert...

From the launch PH man John Mahoney reported the air-sprung cars all felt a little teetery and underdamped, even with the supposedly sporty Dynamic setting engaged. Now for that essential 'we'll wait until we've driven it in the UK' verdict: yes, it still feels a little teetery and underdamped. R-Design may be at the sporty end of the Volvo spectrum and complete with a 'lowered sports chassis'. But it's clear the V90 is built for comfort, not speed.


Pulls like a (night)train
The four-cylinder clatter is well-contained but inescapable at lower speeds and not really becoming of the V90's sense of gravitas. The PowerPulse system at least means response is more enthusiastic than the cylinder count - and noise - would suggest, at least in first and second where it is available. From there the V90 adopts what old-school roadtesters would probably describe as a 'loping gait' that is both entirely relaxing and resolutely unlikely to encourage exploration of what lies beyond the V90's equally old-fashioned interpretation of body control. That's fine though. After all, it's arguably more foolish fitting a four-cylinder diesel estate with track-spec suspension settings than it is comfy ones. No names mentioned.

And it gives you time to enjoy the surroundings. Which are refreshingly different from the German offerings by virtue of being opulent and luxurious yet cool, modern and chintz-free. The nine-inch central touchscreen - vertically oriented like a Tesla - takes a little learning but has a logical interface, clean graphics and is packed with features. Sound from the Bowers & Wilkins hifi is spectacular too. Or at least it was until revisiting Appetite For Destruction at an unsociable volume on the M4 started left the door speaker rattling. Guns'n'Roses in a Volvo - the life of a roadtester really is that cool.


Paradise city
You'll be building a picture here of the V90 as the embodiment of sensible pants motoring, underscored by a suite of safety technology that'll illuminate the shadows cast by its own LED headlights, dodge round wildlife, steer you back onto the road if you nod off through Slash's solo in Sweet Child O'Mine and squawk at you if you fail to spot that pushy Audi trying to sneak by as you pull out of your parking space at Waitrose. It's all of those things, the Pilot Assist system able to nudge you between the white lines and maintain a safe distance to the car in front even if you can't be bothered with these most basic of driving tasks. Good thing it won't let you drive for extended periods hands free if you're stupid enough to try dangling things from the steering wheel to simulate the weight of your hand. Cough.

In short? Meet the new big Volvo estate car, very much the same as the old big Volvo estate car. With added luxury. And the added benefit of not being German. That and a Caterham (other track cars are available) on a trailer behind it and your PH motoring needs are pretty much covered.


VOLVO V90 D5 POWERPULSE AWD R-DESIGN
Engine
: 1,969cc, inline-four turbocharged diesel
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 235@4,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 354@1,750rpm
0-62mph: 7.2sec
Top speed: 149mph
Weight: 1,927kg (kerb)
MPG: 57.6
CO2: 129g/km
Price: £44,865 (As tested £56,085 comprising £2,000 for Xenium pack [power glass tilt and slide sunroof, parking camera 360 degree view and park assist pilot], £775 for Winter plus pack [active bending lights with adaptive shadow technology, front LED fog lights with cornering function, heated front windscreen, heated washer nozzles, headlight cleaning system], £300 for Smartphone integration with 2xUSB 1xAUX input, £3,000 for Sensus connect with premium sound by Bowers & Wilkins, £500 for Volvo on call with app, £100 for CD player, £750 for laminated side windows, £600 for Blind spot information system with cross traffic alert and rear collision mitigations plus auto dimming exterior mirrors, £575 for keyless drive with remote tag plus handsfree tailgate opening/closing, £620 for r-Design carbon fibre inlays, £600 for Power driver seat with memory, £400 for power passenger seat and £1,000 for premium metallic)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

tankplanker

Original Poster:

2,479 posts

280 months

Thursday 23rd March 2017
quotequote all
I've really enjoyed driving our XC90 and compared to the competition is was available at a decent discount compared to its competitors. However Volvo seem to be pushing up the price by moving thing that used to be standard for the Inscription and R Design models onto the options list, these for example were all standard on my XC90:

£775 for Winter plus pack
£500 for Volvo on call with app
£575 for keyless drive with remote tag plus handsfree tailgate opening/closing
£600 for Power driver seat with memory
£400 for power passenger

this pushes the V90 to be more than I paid for my XC90 6 months ago despite being a very similar spec.

tankplanker

Original Poster:

2,479 posts

280 months

Thursday 23rd March 2017
quotequote all
steffg60 said:
I currently have a XC60 and been looking at the model but most of the standard things are like you said now in pack which is extra
I priced up the XC60 D5 as we will downsize when the XC90 goes back and was shocked that it came out to within £2k of my XC90 when spec'd with the same D5, they even moved the Adaptive Cruise Control into a £1500 pack!

tankplanker

Original Poster:

2,479 posts

280 months

Friday 24th March 2017
quotequote all
BeirutTaxi said:
Powerpulse 2.0tdi. Just doesn't seem right to say both in the same sentence.
The power pulse concept is pretty clever and works well in practice. The air driven compressor does a good job to reduce lag on what is a fairly boosty engine in the lower gears. I'm sure the electrically driven compressor in the Audi SQ7 is "better" but it requires a complicated 48V electrical system and adds extra weight, something neither car really wants. I would like to see the power pulse concept on a high performance petrol turbo hatchback as it would go some way to improving throttle response.

tankplanker

Original Poster:

2,479 posts

280 months

Friday 24th March 2017
quotequote all
ORD said:
What does the £16k over £40k get you? I just cannot see how they even begin to justify the pricing.
It is no different to the Audi/Merc/BMW option lists that are full of expensive options that nobody really needs and nearly always seem to be fitted to the press cars:

£44,865 (As tested £56,085 comprising:
£3,000 for Sensus connect with premium sound by Bowers & Wilkins
£2,000 for Xenium pack [power glass tilt and slide sunroof, parking camera 360 degree view and park assist pilot]
£1,000 for premium metallic
£750 for laminated side windows
£600 for Blind spot information system with cross traffic alert and rear collision mitigation plus auto dimming exterior mirrors
£620 for r-Design carbon fibre inlays

that's nearly £8k of options you could live without.

These ones are pretty good value from my experience:
£775 for Winter plus pack [active bending lights with adaptive shadow technology, front LED fog lights with cornering function, heated front windscreen, heated washer nozzles, headlight cleaning system]
£300 for Smartphone integration with 2xUSB 1xAUX input - gives you Android Auto and the Apple equilvent
£575 for keyless drive with remote tag plus handsfree tailgate opening/closing

These ones your mileage may vary:
£500 for Volvo on call with app - best thing is the remote start, useful for the winter and is cheaper than buying the secondary heating system
£100 for CD player
£600 for Power driver seat with memory
£400 for power passenger seat

If it was me I'd also get:
£550 for 4-Zone Electronic Climate Control and Cooled Glovebox
£300 for Heated Rear Seats - Outer Positions 2nd Row

The trim upgrades from the default add either a high quality nappa leather or nubuck for the R-Design, both are better than the base pleather from BMW/Merc. The pro versions add larger wheels, something the Volvos do not benefit from, a bunch of other pointless upgrades and air suspension. Personally I do not think the air suspension is worth the money on the Volvo but others may like it. Sweet spot for me is the Inscription trim level with the bigger dash display, nappa leather, mood lighting, leather dash topper, walnut inlays and other upgrades that make the car actually look like the press cars. It is a good £4k over the base momentum however.

tankplanker

Original Poster:

2,479 posts

280 months

Friday 24th March 2017
quotequote all
Krikkit said:
I'd agree, although I think I'd be tempted to the premium sound, blind spot, winter pack etc on the test car - if you're spunking £40-50k on a practical car why not have the nice toys to go with it?
The winter pack is in my list of recommended upgrades, I have made use of all of the winter pack upgrades on my XC90 over the winter. Blind spot is a tricky one, for some it would be a benefit but I'm conditioned to looking over my shoulder before I change lanes so it wouldn't be doing something that I don't already do myself.

I was really conflicted with the premium audio option for my XC90, it sounds amazing but it is a a lot of money if you aren't going to use it to the full very often. Our XC90 is mostly used when we are all in the car, so we don't have the stereo on and if we do it isn't on loud. If I used the car more by myself then I would be seriously tempted as it is very good.

Other upgrades I went for that I wouldn't bother again are the big sunroof as you sit too far forward in the front to see out of it when looking up (you have to look up and back) and the laminated side windows as they do not offer enough noise reduction (to my ears) to justify their extra price. If I hadn't had those two options then I would have had most of the money for the premium sound, oh hum.

I was disappointed that you couldn't get the front parking sensors without the 360 degree cameras, I would only need one not both of those options.