RE: 2021 Peugeot 508 SW PSE | PH Review
RE: 2021 Peugeot 508 SW PSE | PH Review
Wednesday 21st April 2021

2021 Peugeot 508 SW PSE | PH Review

Hybrid 508 gets 360hp and an expansive remit. Good thing it looks the part...



We're not sure if the pandemic is entirely to blame for the two-year gap between the reveal of the Peugeot Sport 508 and its arrival in Britain. But one thing's for sure, it looks as brilliant now as it did in those heady pre-pandemic days. Sure, it borrows some details from the 208, but that merely confirms the effectiveness of Peugeot's latest design language. And anyway, with 360hp the hybrid 508 does more than just win you over with its striking looks. Thanks to its turbocharged 1.6-litre engine and two, yes two, electric motors, it's the most powerful Peugeot to date.

The four-cylinder unit is familiar from the 208 GTI, a car that Peugeot Sport did terrific things with back in middle of the last decade, with a 200hp output that's supplemented by the brace of 11.5kWh battery-powered motors, a 110hp one on the front axle and a 113hp one at the back. Consequently, the all-wheel drive configuration is biased towards the nose, and marshalled via an eight-speed automatic gearbox. Combined torque peaks at a muscular 384lb ft, which is 74lb ft better than a BMW 330e.

The 508 wins off the line, too, with a 5.2-second 0-62mph time. Moreover the Peugeot will do 155mph, which would suggest that the petrol engine is doing most of the heavy lifting - but in fact the car defaults to its electrified components where possible, and uses the motor as a booster. Although with electric range confined to 26 miles and 86mph, the latter is a constant presence.



Not that the relationship requires much consideration when you're driving, because the powertrain is remarkable for its seamlessness and ease of use. Press the start button, and the car will happily choose how to blend electric and petrol power itself, leaving you to enjoy the swish cabin. It is comfortable, feels of decent quality and is pleasingly different to the designs of its many rivals - sporty graphics, intuitive menus and lime green flashes included. The electrically adjusted seat goes nice and low, and the wheel pulls close so expect to feel cosseted.

Visibility is good, though - and before you ask, the flat-top steering wheel leaves 99 per cent of the 12.3-inch instrument cluster in line-of-sight, with only the odometer reading hidden by the rim. Peugeot's obsession with small diameter wheels hasn't always paid dividends, although here it does give the impression of greater agility and compactness. At 4,778mm length in SW format the 508 is certainly not small, so the cabin in turn feels spacious enough, with very good rear legroom and a boot offering 530 litres of space. Add to that the WLTP-quoted 46g/km and 139mpg, and it measures up well enough on the practicality front.

As for the fun stuff, the car gets up and goes every bit as quick as the performance numbers suggest in sport mode, launching off the line without slip and powering up with a linear delivery. Even with your foot buried into the carpet, engine noise is subdued, with its smooth four-pot tone accentuated by electric whine. Ease off the accelerator and the 508 will settle into a cruise either with the engine completely off or, if the battery is low on juice, spinning at low revs. It's an amenable place to be, although the Michelin Pilot Sport 4S rubber did seem to hiss over certain surfaces. Doubtless 20-inch rims don't help.

Despite such large wheels, the Peugeot Sport 508 rides well on standard adaptive dampers, which allow for enough vertical movement in comfort mode to soak up bumps and uneven surfaces. Sharper ridges and road imperfections can thud through the strut, but with a rubberised edge to the shock absorption. As such, the chassis feels tight but well judged. Click over to sport and the damping tightens, but only by a modest amount, the benefits of which are only really noticeable when you carry some commitment into a corner. Do that, and the 508 is surprisingly keen, with plenty of grip over both axles and body control primed for quick direction changes.



The elasticity of hybrid power, composure of the suspension and strength of the brakes defies the 508 SW's 1,875kg kerbweight. There's Peugeot Sport character in there, too, as evidenced by the car's willingness to allow mild doses of trail-brake-stimulated oversteer. Not that the manufacturer is suggesting this as a raison d'être; there is an ESC button buried in the menus, but it'll automatically switch back on after a few seconds whether you like it or not. Not that it really made much of a difference on a warm spring day, with the all-wheel drive traction all but unbreakable and any playfulness best described as fleeting. The 508 is more concerned with feeling positive and swift to react to steering input.

This is all well and good, but eagerness-to-please is not necessarily synonymous with involvement. This is not the fault of the powertrain: 360hp from a petrol-hybrid might not sound deeply thrilling, but the gearbox and power delivery are pleasing enough to interact with. Instead it's the steering which falls short, with Peugeot conjuring up too little feel from its electric rack. In its defence, there's no awkward weighting to cloud things; just a fundamental lack of comms with the front wheels. And, as ever, that's a problem when you're hoping to appreciate the nuance of a seemingly well-sorted chassis.

True enough, nothing in the immediate hybrid vicinity aces this test. Those wanting a superior level of engagement are better served by traditional models - among them the M340d that currently serves on the PH fleet - although naturally none of these options offer the all-electric range that distinguishes the Peugeot. With that in mind, and as its maker intended, the 508 PSE offers something like a compelling mix even accounting for its dynamic shortfall. Car buyers tend to look kindly on that sweet spot where functionality, good looks and strong performance converge - and the new model has those attributes in spades. Of course, at £55,795 - over £10k more than a 330e xDrive M Sport Touring - it will assuredly need all of them.


SPECIFICATION | PEUGEOT 508 SW PEUGEOT SPORT ENGINEERED

Engine: 1,598cc, four-cyl turbo, plus two electric motors
Transmission: 8-speed auto, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 360
Torque (lb ft): 384
0-62mph: 5.2 seconds
Top speed: 155mph
Weight: 1,875kg
MPG: 138.9 (WLTP)
CO2: 46g/km (WLTP)
Price: £55,795 (starting and price as tested)






Author
Discussion

forzaminardi

Original Poster:

2,298 posts

208 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
To me this is very appealing in being an example of the increasingly lesser-spotted 'car not a jeep' family wagon. Looks good, seems to go well, nice interior, plenty of space. Unfortunately being in Oz it'll be absurdly overpriced and impossible to buy or get serviced given the scarcity of Peugeot dealers who seem to think its a premium brand on basis of being, um, European?

ettore

4,745 posts

273 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
It is a good looking car but at over £50k it will be a rare sight beyond the driveway of the dealer principal’s.

I’ve had a few current Peugeot’s as hire cars and they feel well built and are refined. Leaden though, fleeting glimpses of fun, but brief, before the torque runs out or the systems intervene. The interiors feel solid too and have a certain form of glitzy showroom appeal but this wears away - lovely piano switches and nice materials undermined by fussy detailing, Korean stereo graphics and that horrid steering wheel that makes you feel like you’re sitting on top of the car.


Terminator X

18,998 posts

225 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Great looking car although for £10k more you get an Audi RS4? Arguably better looking, +2 cylinders and +100hp.

TX.

Honeywell

1,593 posts

119 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
I'd be interested to know the real world fuel economy of these hybrid cars as I suspect WLTP figures are way too optimistic.

reapercushions

7,283 posts

205 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
Great looking car although for £10k more you get an Audi RS4? Arguably better looking, +2 cylinders and +100hp.

TX.
But none of the BIK and climate benefits. I strongly suspect these will lease / company car / fleet vehicles.

Can’t see many walking up to a dealership with cash in hand paying RRP.

Piginapoke

5,718 posts

206 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
I was onboard until £55K eek

aponting389

746 posts

199 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Honeywell said:
I'd be interested to know the real world fuel economy of these hybrid cars as I suspect WLTP figures are way too optimistic.
That all depends on your mileage and type of journeys. Those who predominantly do short local trips will see 100mpg+ average. Those who do longer trips will see anywhere from as low as high 20s/low 30s upwards depending on the journeys

Gameface

16,565 posts

98 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Be a great buy in 3 to 5 years.

British Beef

2,561 posts

186 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
very nice looking, and i really like their unique dashboard styling.

Great to have the hybrid and electric functionaity for tax reductions.

However the elephant in the room overshadowing both the above is £55 k for a Peugeot estate, unless it came with a comprehensive 5 year unlimited mileage warranty, I would still have massive conerns regarding reliability.

anonymous-user

75 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
I really like that, be nice to pick one up in a few years if anyone buys one new!

cerb4.5lee

40,311 posts

201 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Piginapoke said:
I was onboard until £55K eek
You do at least get a 1.6 engine in return to be fair though! A bargain. hehe

Magikarp

1,498 posts

69 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Gameface said:
Be a great buy in 3 to 5 years.
Would you want that out of warranty? I wouldn’t.

stumpage

2,183 posts

247 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
cerb4.5lee said:
Piginapoke said:
I was onboard until £55K eek
You do at least get a 1.6 engine in return to be fair though! A bargain. hehe
Yep, when you consider people are having to pay £2.4m for this 1.6 engine hybrid.



It's 2021, technology is moving on from massive cc cars.

stumpage

2,183 posts

247 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
You need to ignore the list price with a car like this. All that matters is the fully maintained lease cost as it is aimed at company car drivers.

With its level of kit as standard, decent load capacity and its 46g/km Co2 it is nice to have an option away from the BMW 330e to have in the company car park. If this would have come out 6 months ago I would have ordered one.

anonymous-user

75 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
I wonder what the real world cost difference is between this and the eHybrid Touareg R that everyone has lambasted for being too expensive.

Burgerbob

491 posts

98 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
I rather like it, and I'm sure it'll be a good car. But Peugeot will not be expecting to sell many. Its a halo car to showcase the brand and the engineers, and to encourage people to buy lower down the range.

cerb4.5lee

40,311 posts

201 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
stumpage said:
cerb4.5lee said:
Piginapoke said:
I was onboard until £55K eek
You do at least get a 1.6 engine in return to be fair though! A bargain. hehe
Yep, when you consider people are having to pay £2.4m for this 1.6 engine hybrid.



It's 2021, technology is moving on from massive cc cars.
Technology might be moving on...but that doesn't mean that I have to though! biggrin

If it was a choice between a 1.6 hybrid and a 6.5 V12 engine...it wouldn't be the 1.6 that would get a look in from me. smile

I've had my time though to be fair, and all this electric and hybrid stuff is for a much younger generation than me I reckon.

Krikkit

27,731 posts

202 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
stumpage said:
You need to ignore the list price with a car like this. All that matters is the fully maintained lease cost as it is aimed at company car drivers.

With its level of kit as standard, decent load capacity and its 46g/km Co2 it is nice to have an option away from the BMW 330e to have in the company car park. If this would have come out 6 months ago I would have ordered one.
Exactly, I'd give it serious thought amongst that kind of crowd.

anonymous-user

75 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
Having driven a few 508's and several of the recent Peugeots, I can only imagine how good this thing is. Admittedly this is pricey, be interesting to see what the lease/PCP costs are on it, but on paper the performance should be along the lines of the latest S4 avant, which is diesel redface

In a world of SUV's this car doesn't seem to have much direct competition? M340i xDrive Touring?

Definitely a halo car, should help the 508 sales further down the range.

stumpage

2,183 posts

247 months

Tuesday 20th April 2021
quotequote all
MrBig said:
Having driven a few 508's and several of the recent Peugeots, I can only imagine how good this thing is. Admittedly this is pricey, be interesting to see what the lease/PCP costs are on it, but on paper the performance should be along the lines of the latest S4 avant, which is diesel redface

In a world of SUV's this car doesn't seem to have much direct competition? M340i xDrive Touring?

Definitely a halo car, should help the 508 sales further down the range.
M340i xDrive is not competition though. You need cars with below 50g/km Co2 to compare

BMW 330e xDrive M Sport Pro Touring at £49.5k without adding all the kit needed to get to the 508's level
Volvo V60 Polestar Engineered at £50.5k without adding all the 508s kit.

And.....that's about it.