Volvo V60 Polestar Engineered | Driven

Volvo V60 Polestar Engineered | Driven

Monday 6th January 2020

2020 Volvo V60 Polestar Engineered | UK Review

The V60 Polestar was once a six-cylinder cult hero; now it's a two-tonne hybrid. But is it any good?



Look familiar? Yep, correct, Christmas overindulgence hasn't clouded the memory (or judgement) too far: this V60 Polestar is a lot like the S60 Polestar driven just last month. Where that was a saloon, this is an estate. Other than that, they're pretty much identical: same powertrain, same interior, same very expensive chassis hardware. They're even hard to separate on kerbweight, the V only adding 29kg to the chunky 2,050kg kerbweight of the S.

But the crucial difference is the obvious one, because it's a fast Volvo estate - and in the UK at least, that still means a lot. Because people still speak fondly of 850s and V70s, we've all been overtaken (or, perhaps, pulled over) by a battenburged bus from Torslanda, and furthering the mystique, the last Polestar of note over here was the estate-only V60. Big, quick, Volvo saloons are nothing more than that, but the estates have a cult charm seldom replicated elsewhere, meaning this Polestar Engineered car almost has a responsibility to deliver. There's a quarter of a century of heritage behind it now, after all...

However, while memories of that heritage may quickly turn to tyre-squealing, warbling wardrobe wagons of old, the V60 Polestar Engineered is an altogether more subdued experience. Indeed running purely on electricity for the first few urban miles, it's the perfect foil to the festive hustle and bustle, with ample performance from the motor and isolation from the outside world so luxurious it borders on deprivation. It's chamber of total calm. With the best seats in the business and a thumping media system, the V60 makes for a fine urban warrior; surprising perhaps, but surely of merit if it will see service on the school run.


Moreover, there's the feel of a properly engineered, thoroughly developed car even when running on electric power. The pedals are easy to modulate and meter out force to, which isn't always guaranteed with EVs and regenerative braking; while the steering is not the last word in anything, the response off-centre is nice and the weighting good; there's a burly sophistication to the ride from those Ohlins dampers that makes the V60 feel plush, if lardy. Even without its engine running, the V60 feels tangibly more Polestar than Volvo. Which is great, of course, though for £6k more than an R-Design Plus with the same powertrain, one would hope for at least a little Polestar presence.

Called upon to deliver the full potential of its hybrid powertrain and the V60 is obliging, probably more so when fully committed than not, when it can feel hesitant in its decision making. And while this newly hybridised four-cylinder would make a mockery of any five- or six-cylinder Volvo engine that came before it, there's no escaping the fact that the Polestar never feels anything more than decently brisk (blame that kerbweight, once more). That said the eight-speed auto is a mostly dutiful ally, and it'll be more than fast enough for most. Don't underestimate the appeal of drivers moving aside for a white Volvo estate, either...

While many of the Volvo's laudable handling attributes are evident when driving at higher speed, that isn't to say it's beyond criticism. It always feels like a front-driven car with extra traction in its balance and behaviour, which isn't something that could be said of an Audi S4 or Mercedes C43. While the podgy Polestar steers accurately and faithfully, there's no great sense of urgency to its direction changes. And the whine emitted from the four-cylinder combustion engine isn't exactly tuneful, particularly in the context of predominantly six-cylinder rivals.


So as a conventional fast estate the V60 PE struggles to cut it, even if other reports suggest it's a worthwhile improvement from the standard T8. But that would be missing the point. Because as a fast Volvo the Polestar hits the target more convincingly than a Harry Kane penalty; it accrues speed with the minimum of fuss and maintains it almost as nonchalantly, with enormous grip from the bespoke P Zeros and titanic braking power from the Akebono rotors - yes, the same people who worked with McLaren to make sure the P1 stopped. Once up to your chosen velocity it'll sit there calmly, assuredly until there's a decision to go even faster, which it's only too happy to oblige. For covering ground there can't be many better - 'twas ever thus with a big Volvo, a tradition ably continued here.

The Polestar's problem is the compromise. Because it's easy to imagine a regular T8 Twin Engine doing the job of all-season, all-weather performance, if lacking the additional dynamism of this car. The Polestar, even with the brakes and the suspension and the forged wheels, then can't quite muster the nous required to compete with the very best fast estates out there - and it would be the very best, too, given this car's £61,000 as-tested price tag.

Polestar's fettling of various V60 elements display an aptitude and finesse that make it more than agreeable company, but working with a base in excess of 2,000kg inevitably means at least one arm was tied behind its back, resulting in a Polestar Volvo that's neither fish nor fowl. Immensely likeable, certainly, and a hybrid twist on the fast Volvo formula that will appeal to traditional tastes, though not quite impressive or exciting enough to justify its billing or cost - particularly in a very talented sector. Another cult contender, then.


SPECIFICATION - VOLVO V60 POLESTAR ENGINEERED
Engine:
1,969cc, turbocharged and supercharged, plus electric motor
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 405@6,000rpm (combined)
Torque (lb ft): 474@2,050rpm (combined)
0-62mph: 4.4 secs
Top speed: 155mph
Weight: 2,079kg (in running order)
MPG: 104.5 WLTP
CO2: 48g/km
Price: £57,205 (as standard; price as tested £61,505 comprised of Crystal White premium metallic paint for £975, charge cable for £50, 20-inch alloy wheels for £850, Intellisafe Surround pack for £625 and Xenium Pack (Power Glass Tilt and Slide Panoramic Sunroof with Sun Curtain, Parking Camera 360° Surround View and Park Assist Pilot (includes Front Park Assist) for £1,800)

Search for a Volvo V60 here













Author
Discussion

Wills2

Original Poster:

22,804 posts

175 months

Monday 6th January 2020
quotequote all
Looks nice inside and out but it's too heavy for a mid sized car, those performance figures are in doubt as well, Autocar only managed 5.4 to 60 mph in their test and it got hammered on a Carwow video by the M340i.

It's a nice thing but the price is steep.







Edited by Wills2 on Tuesday 7th January 09:43

blearyeyedboy

6,290 posts

179 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Hmm.

"Fast, but not a satisfying drive and not as good as the competition, too expensive for what it offers" seems to be the verdict for every fast estate from Volvo since the 850 T5.

And yet they have a loyal following; I wonder if time will be kinder to this car than the review is.

GTEYE

2,096 posts

210 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
I like the idea, and it looks good but it doesn’t somehow look good enough for that sort of money.

As above M340i would be my choice for less money.

spikyone

1,451 posts

100 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
It's a very handsome car but it also looks huge. If you'd shown me that in isolation I would've guessed it was a V90. The huge weight is not at all surprising.
I realise that bigger cars offer easier packaging for a worthwhile hybrid/electric system but I can't help but think we'd improve the environmental impact even more by focusing on making cars smaller and lighter. They'd be nicer to drive too.

loveice

648 posts

247 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Wills2 said:
Looks nice inside and out but it's too heavy for a mid sized car, those performance figures are in doubt as well, Autocar only managed 5.4 to 62mph in their test and it got hammered on a Carwow video by the M340i.

It's a nice thing but the price is steep.





Edited by Wills2 on Monday 6th January 22:59
And the new S4 was hammered by everything else... Anyway, I thought the Polestar overall held up well with the AMG though. I agree M340i in terms of straight line performance is in a totally different league.

DeltonaS

3,707 posts

138 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
with enormous grip from the bespoke P Zeros and titanic braking power from the Akebono rotors - yes, the same people who worked with McLaren to make sure the P1 stopped.

According to the Volvo website and the sticker on the calipers the brakes are from Brembo, So rotors (and pads?) from Akebono and the calipers from Brembo ?

Gitwhoismiserable

767 posts

123 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
that Ohlins adjuster nob is going to gather dust, looks nice though, 340i for me

aeropilot

34,577 posts

227 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Needs an extra cylinder.......


Superdavros

236 posts

232 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
It might be me, but by saying, “BMW 340 for me..” does that not miss the point this Volvo is a hybrid, where the 340 is a regular 6 cylinder petrol engine, or have I got that wrong?

This Polestar thing is £60k - the 340 is £50k isn’t it? then you may as well go for the XFR-S for £30k in that case, so surely this is more of. C53 Merc comparison or anything else which is 400bhp and partly battery powered...?

No Face

252 posts

189 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
I’m interested to know how close to that massive quoted MPG people are getting in tests.

I’d also like to know the size of the balls of the person who buys one of these when they’re a few years old and out of warranty. Sounds like a very complicated thing. I expect to see one in the ‘brave pill’ feature around 2030.

FN2TypeR

7,091 posts

93 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
What, no Rebel Blue? Unacceptable! jester

court

1,487 posts

216 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Discs still, or rotors now acceptable in the UK?

RicksAlfas

13,396 posts

244 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
It's a handsome thing. Shame it's coal hole black only for the interior when this is available...


J4CKO

41,549 posts

200 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Sort of misses the point as dont think Volvo owners feel the need to beat BMW's off the lights, its plenty fast enough just that the 340i accelerates a bit harder.

Its heavy, but again, nobody isnt going to be trying to set lap records, lighter is better but the trade off is it can run on electric power for 30 odd miles and you have a petrol engine so no range anxiety about it. I could do my commute to work for two days without recharging and then drive to the south coast without giving it a thought at the weekend.

I do think Hybrids are the car equivalent of those VHS video/DVD combos to an extent, but its a car built for now, not for 10/15 years hence when battery only tech will be a lot further on, think they will look a bit antiquated.

Handsome things Volvos these days as well.

768

13,677 posts

96 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
spikyone said:
It's a very handsome car but it also looks huge. If you'd shown me that in isolation I would've guessed it was a V90. The huge weight is not at all surprising.
I realise that bigger cars offer easier packaging for a worthwhile hybrid/electric system but I can't help but think we'd improve the environmental impact even more by focusing on making cars smaller and lighter. They'd be nicer to drive too.
I'd assume it's nearer the size of the old V90 than the new one. The new one looks massive.

This certainly is handsome, which is something I can't say for the V90. Whether I'd buy one though I'm not so sure.

Kawasicki

13,082 posts

235 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
Weren’t Volvo to limit all models to 112mph from 2020 onwards?

Beefmeister

16,482 posts

230 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
RicksAlfas said:
It's a handsome thing. Shame it's coal hole black only for the interior when this is available...

I love this interior, but it's almost impossible to spec on a V60. Has to be a really lowly trim level, I'd want this on a top spec Cross Country model!

AmosMoses

4,041 posts

165 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
I love that you can now buy a Volvo with Ohlins dampers laugh So damn cool.

J4CKO

41,549 posts

200 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
RicksAlfas said:
It's a handsome thing. Shame it's coal hole black only for the interior when this is available...

That is ace, dont know why punters are so hung up on scratchy, cold, black "leather" like in my BMW, that just looks so comfy and inviting but nobody wants anyone thinking their example isnt super premium so must have leather.

Would take that over most leather interiors, done right leather is lovely but most is just a modern version of Vinyl seats, and a lot of cloth seats are just nasty fabric as a punishment for not speccing leather.

Need some proper velour back on the options list.

Gitwhoismiserable

767 posts

123 months

Tuesday 7th January 2020
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
That is ace, dont know why punters are so hung up on scratchy, cold, black "leather" like in my BMW, that just looks so comfy and inviting but nobody wants anyone thinking their example isnt super premium so must have leather.

Would take that over most leather interiors, done right leather is lovely but most is just a modern version of Vinyl seats, and a lot of cloth seats are just nasty fabric as a punishment for not speccing leather.

Need some proper velour back on the options list.


you wouldn't want velour if you had a dog like mine!