RE: Maserati Levante Trofeo | Driven

RE: Maserati Levante Trofeo | Driven

Thursday 11th July 2019

2020 Maserati Levante Trofeo | PH Review

580hp from a Ferrari-built V8 and a soundtrack to match - is this the Levante we've been waiting for?



It turns out that we weren't the only ones disappointed by the first Maserati Levante's use of a V6 diesel engine. The engineers behind the model had, we now know, already produced a skunkworks V8 petrol version, such was their enthusiasm for the introduction of a high-performance halo. Thanks to market trends though and pie charts and executives in board rooms, at the car's launch in 2016 we were presented with a Levante that used a characterless oil burner. It really hampered the SUV's ability to make an impression in the segment, and while the V6 petrol that followed drastically improved the situation, the Levante has never really stood out from the crowd. Now, three years into the Levante's life, Maserati's engineers have finally got their way; the brand is introducing two V8-powered Levantes to the market. There's the 530hp GTS and the skunkworks dream come true, the 580hp Trofeo.

Forget what you've learned about the Levante up till now because the introduction of this engine creates something substantially different from before. The Maranello-made 3.9-litre motor is based on the one that powers the Quattroporte GTS, but it's got two new twin-scroll turbochargers, new cylinder heads and a different camshaft, as well as different pistons and connecting rods, so power in the Trofeo peaks at 580hp at 6,250rpm, while torque rises to 538lb ft between 2,500-5,000rpm. Those are very good numbers for the segment, yet it's the engine's voice that most assertively establishes the V8 Levante as something separate from the rest of the range.

It really has to, because the design changes to reflect its newfound potency are deliberately discreet. Maserati still has to appeal to its mature customer base, so the fitment of 22-inch wheels - the largest yet fitter to a Maser - sportier bumpers and quad-exit exhausts are considered suggestive enough. Responsibility falls to the V8 to illustrate the pace, and it certainly sounds appropriately glorious from inside and out. The quad pipes project its muscular, foreboding growl at low revs that builds into a powerful orchestra of tones, backed by induction whooshes, gargles and sharp cracks on upshifts. It all sounds real and genuine too, with no artificial speaker trickery of fake pops and bangs. If there were an award for exhaust note alone, the Trofeo would take the win in the SUV class with honours.


It's so exciting to hear, in fact, that you might even be able to forgive the car for its sub-par interior. The seats are lovely and the cross-stitched leather is soft to touch, but the fit and finish of the trim is no match for the Porsche Cayenne, nor is the tech on offer, which looks six or seven years behind the Stuttgart alternative and has none of the theatre offered by the a Range Rover's plethora of digital screens. The Levante's dash, with its 8.4-inch touchscreen and narrow instrument cluster display, feels only a slight step up from that of the Alfa Romeo Stelvio QF, which is almost half the price of the £125k Trofeo. It's a shame the space you sit in feels so far behind its rivals, but as soon as you start that Italian motor up, your attention is completely diverted.

In the Trofeo's normal mode the bass of the V8 is permanently audible in the background, though not a significant feature. Until you spin the crank past 4,500rpm, that is, when presumably the exhaust automatically switches into its loudest mode. Avoid that, and the highly refined Trofeo takes the manner of something more relaxed, flaunting its impressively low road noise - despite the 295-width tyres beneath the rear arches - and ride quality that shames SUVs with much smaller wheels. So good is it over the cracked and often crumbling surfaces of our Modena hillside test route that we might even suggest the Trofeo - which, let's not forget, is by far the most sporting model of the Levante line-up - is actually the best riding car in the range. Combined with the effortless progress provided by the engine and the fluidity of the ZF eight-speed torque converter, it's actually rather lovely to cruise about in.


Click through to Corsa mode and the damping rates tighten a tad (you can switch them back to normal without affecting the powertrain setting if you want), although not so much as to make the ride harsh or uncomfortable. It's probably a 10 per cent change that is only really noticeable when you turn up the pace, in this case around the hairpins and successive bends of an Italian route that Ferrari routinely uses for testing. The 2,170kg Trofeo is properly fast, the swiftness of each gearshift made all the more noticeable in manual mode, when using the metal wheel-mounted paddles is a real joy. Corsa drastically reduces the stability control's interference, but even on a rainy Modena day there's ample traction and enough grip from the tyres to provide security and confidence. On-throttle oversteer can be encouraged with a flick of lock and heavy dose of power, should you want it; but the Levante's temporarily-driven front axle means slides are measured and limited to a few metres of travel. In a big SUV like this, that's no bad thing.

It also better suits the manner of the Trofeo, which, despite its motorsport-esque name, is more a jacked-up GT than sports car-aping SUV. The steering is too slow and lacking in feel to offer that (its hardware is shared with the Ghibli), while the Levante's two-tonne-plus mass means it can lift and duck over undulations at speed. The front end never feels unresponsive, nor does the body ever feel loose; but it's a fair step away from the rapid, hunkered down movements of a Cayenne Turbo. This is, we're told, a deliberate move in order to retain the Maserati characteristics of a comfortable, fast continent-crosser, rather than an Alfa Quadrifoglio-like raciness. In that regard, this Levante has the philosophy nailed, and most importantly, it does it while also being genuinely engaging and fun, largely thanks to the elasticity and exotic vocals of that powertrain. It is an SUV in which you might opt to take the long and winding road home, which is not something we'd have said about a Levante until now.

The lesser-powered GTS does, admittedly, offer about 90 per cent of the Trofeo's overall performance, for a £20k saving. And since we couldn't notice the 50hp deficit, and the ever-so-slightly softer Sport setting (there's no Corsa in the GTS) had a miniscule impact on lateral responsiveness, you might argue that opting for the Trofeo defies logic. But, let's be frank; a V8 Levante is unlikely to ever be the sensible decision. The better-finished, better-equipped and faster Cayenne Turbo would, relatively speaking, be a smarter candidate for that. No, we suspect a V8 Levante will be most interesting to those who want an additional car that's different, exciting and very Italian above all else. Those who could easily justify forking out the added premium for the top variant - a first year tax rate of over two grand should ensure that. In the case of that person, the Levante Trofeo ought to be a very desirable offering. One that we're very happy has finally joined the range.


SPECIFICATION - MASERATI LEVANTE TROFEO

Engine: 3,799cc, twin turbocharged V8
Transmission: eight-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 580@6,250rpm
Torque (lb ft): 538@2,5000-5,000rpm
0-62mph: 4.1sec
Top speed: 186mph
Weight: 2,170kg
MPG: 21.4
CO2: 319
Price: £124,900

Inspired? Search for a Maserati Levante here





Author
Discussion

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Thursday 11th July 2019
quotequote all
As the owner of a Cayenne S this should have been an alternative when choosing, but it falls way short given the price. Maserati doesn't seem to be able to work out where it sits. It wants to be premium, with a more driver focused remit, but if you look at their product range it is either old, or seems to answer a question nobody has asked. I'm sure the engine is amazing, but their interiors let them down hugely, and in this type of vehicle you really do want all the toys. If you just want a performance SUV the Alfa ticks all the boxes for so much less money. And is it just me or has Maserati lost the ability to make decent looking cars? They have ruined the GranTurismo, the QP is nowhere near as good looking as the previous version, and this with its huge cheese grater mouth looks very awkward.... I think it will sell in tiny numbers

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Thursday 11th July 2019
quotequote all
Jonny TVR said:
Robert-nszl1 said:
They have ruined the GranTurismo,
Its more or less the same as it ever was ..do you mean the new one due out next year, I think it looks fantastic. However one of the great things about the GT was its huge rear seats, does the new one have rear seats at all?

Edited by Jonny TVR on Thursday 11th July 11:00
I think they've rather spoiled the nose. Ruined is possibly a bit of an overstatement! I can't recollect if I've seen the new one.

I agree with the other posters that this engine should go in the ghibli. Always felt a bit under engined given the badge.

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Thursday 11th July 2019
quotequote all
DeltonaS said:
Speaking of looks: The Levante is a more classy and a lot better looking car than the current Cayenne, which looks dull and lardy.

I've sat in all the top SUV's and the interior of the Levante isn't so bad, especially with the Zegna interior option. The let down is the infotainment.

And it drives really well, even in diesel form. With a great suspension set-up incl. an lsd as standard on the rear axle, Porsche will probably charge 10 grand extra for it.

Speaking of diesel, which is so akwardly shafted in the article, all SUV's have diesels, the Cayenne even started the trend.

Another plus, you don't see it as often as a Cayenne.

And this is nonsense: "If you just want a performance SUV the Alfa ticks all the boxes for so much less money."

If so same can be said for the Macan vs. Cayenne.

But really, the Levante is larger and has a more subtle ride with it's air suspension. The Alfa is more extreme less GT has a V6 vs.V8. Etc. etc.



Edited by DeltonaS on Thursday 11th July 19:41
Classy? Well it's an opinion, I think the Cayenne now looks good. Infotainment in a luxury car (because that's what these things are) matters. I have other cars where this is less important, though it's amazing how you miss it when you get into older cars.

An LSD in a family SUV? Really has never crossed my mind. I like it to be fast and safe. Getting the back out? I suspect for a very small number of owners this is a consideration. These are not track toys.

The Macan can pretty much do what the Cayenne can do, other than carry 5 people with luggage. I am currently sitting in Bavaria having driven here with my family plus school friend. It suits my needs in other words. The Macan would have been too small.

You see lots of all types of Porsches because they are good cars. This is as true for the Cayenne as any other. I paid £80k for mine. The Levante wasn't out in this guise when I did so, but £125k is a big step up even vs the turbo. I will be accused of being a Porsche fan boy, and to a degree that's true. But I own a 73 Alfa Giulia as well, so I'd say I just like good cars from whichever era.

And the final point will no doubt be contested, but Maserati build quality is not great. Too many friends testify to this. So in order for this to be a car that you'd actually buy rather than talk about on here it needs to be better than the Porsche in every way, because frankly this is a plush, fast family wagon, and therefore needs to work. And yes who needs an SUV? I just wanted a change from my old 520d estate. Fortunately we are in a world where we can choose....

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Thursday 11th July 2019
quotequote all
nickfrog said:
Robert-nszl1 said:
An LSD in a family SUV? Really has never crossed my mind. I like it to be fast and safe. Getting the back out? I suspect for a very small number of owners this is a consideration. These are not track toys.
An LSD's role is primarily to improve traction, so it will make it safer.
This is 2 tonne, 4wd SUV, with all the associated driver aids. Sorry, do feel free to argue the merits of a LSD, but frankly for this car it's just not relevant.

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Thursday 11th July 2019
quotequote all
Robert-nszl1 said:
This is 2 tonne, 4wd SUV, with all the associated driver aids. Sorry, do feel free to argue the merits of a LSD, but frankly for this car it's just not relevant.
And for clarity I mean that in the sense of a sports car LSD, rather than a locking differential. I might take the Cayenne shooting though just to see whether it can cope. Winter tyres of course....

Robert-nszl1

Original Poster:

401 posts

89 months

Saturday 13th July 2019
quotequote all
eftiem64 said:
Yup, take something that weighs as much as a house and is about as aerodynamic, try and make it as fast as a Ferrari, ignoring that it’s 3x taller and handles like a truck and would get stuck if you tried driving it on anything other than tarmac. That every respected marque is producing these ridiculously over priced, environmentally shameful and hilariously ugly travesties is only because money matters more than anything else. Luckily there’s a market for these to keep footballers, drug dealers and accountants happy but when McLaren or Lotus produce one of these obscenities, it is the end of the world. These things serve no purpose and so are utterly completely and irredeemably pointless. Still, the catastrophic depreciation is justice I suppose.

laugh
Yet in a pervious post you laud the lardy M8, possibly an even less useful tool as viewed against your own measures...heavy, ugly, overpriced, and environmentally shameful.... So my SUV won't go offroad much (it is decent enough depending on the tyres of course) , but speedbumps, and poor road surfaces can be ignored, and much as the centre of gravity is 'wrong' it's amazing how well it goes around bends. Sure an estate could do it as well if not better, and I've owned them too. But I unashamedly like the tonka toy looks of SUVs. I'm not a footballer, a drugdealer, nor indeed an accountant....I do believe in choice, recognising environmental factors are an ever growing aspect of life, and will impact how we consume everything, cars being part of that. But (most) plastics aside, cars are eminently recyclable, and powertrains will get ever cleaner.

Anyway keep the clichés coming, the lack of irony on here never ceases to amaze me at times....