Other than the growing demand for Alternatively Fuelled Vehicles – up by 34.6% in the UK so far this year – the fastest growing sector is SUVs, writes David Miles.
This has seen sales increasing by 30% in Europe and by approximately the same amount in the UK.
In just the last few weeks we have seen the introduction of the Alfa Romeo Stelvio, the Range Rover Velar, the Peugeot 5008 and in short time the mid-sized Vauxhall Grandland X, Citroen C3 Aircross and Kia Stonic compact SUVs will be wheeled out to the motoring Media before UK sales start. More new SUVs of all sizes are also on their way
The Vauxhall Grandland X is a mid-sized five door, five seater SUV which is closely related to the Peugeot 3008 and the collaboration took place before the more recent takeover by PSA Peugeot-Citroen of Vauxhall/Opel European production and sales operations.
The Grandland X is Vauxhall’s third SUV joining their line-up after the compact Mokka X and more recently the slightly smaller Crossland X which is based on the Peugeot 2008 SUV. The single most popular model in the range for the UK will be the Grandland X 1.2 Turbo petrol manual with Sport Nav specification priced at £24,595. At last week’s UK Media launch |
Grandland X models will begin to appear in Vauxhall showrooms towards the end of November and into December with customer deliveries starting in January 2018.
Vauxhall Grandland X prices range from £22,310 up to £29,535. For now it is available with two PSA Group engine options, a 1.2-litre 130hp Turbo petrol unit and a 1.6-litre Turbo D 120hp diesel unit all with Stop/Start and both are available with six-speed manual and automatic gearboxes. None are available with four wheel drive but there is the option of the Vauxhall’s designation of Peugeot Group’s GripControl system called IntelliGrip which lets the driver select from five different driving modes to optimise traction and this option comes with grippier mud and snow tyres. The specification levels are SE, Tech Line Nav aimed at the fleet market, Sport Nav and Elite Nav and all are available with both engines and both manual and automatic transmissions. |
Grandland X Brand Manager Ian Mitchell, said there has been huge growth in UK sales of all sizes of SUVs. The core mid-sized C-segment SUV sector accounted for 10.8% of all UK new car sales last year, around 291,000 units, and the smaller compact B-segments SUV sales grew to 8.3%, or around 223,500 units and Vauxhall predicts those figures will increase to 11.2 and 8.5% respectively this year and grow again in2018.
He said, “Grandland X is a very important car for us to get into a very important sales sector. The sector UK sales leader is the Nissan Qashqai with 62,7000 sales last year followed by the Kia Sportage with 40,100 sales and the Ford Kuga with 35,5000 registrations.
“We expect the Grandland X range to become our second highest selling model range in the UK after the Corsa hatchbacks. We should sell around 20,000 units of Grandland X in the UK next year and 75% of sales will go to retail customers. I expect 65% of customers to choose the 1.2 Turbo petrol engine and 80 to 85% will choose a manual transmission model. As far as specification choices go Sport Nav will account for 60% of sales followed by Tech Line at 25%, Elite Nav at 10% and the base SE level with 5%2.
“With regard to the number of customers taking the IntelliGrip option, which costs between an extra £50 and £500 because of the change in wheel size, currently we have no indications of take up” he added. The IntelliGrip option costs £200 more for the most popular Sport Nav spec level.
At the media launch on the Culdenfaw Estate, near Henley, we stepped into the predicted best selling version – the 1.2-litre Turbo petrol manual with Sport Nav specification priced at £24,595 and it had the extra cost £200 IntelliGrip traction option.
With the same engine, transmission and a mid range popular spec with GripControl a Peugeot 3008 costs £26,195 and currently that difference in price is reflected through the two brand’s ranges with the advantage to the Grandland X.
Whilst the components such as engines, transmission, platform, steering and suspension are the same for the Grandland and 3008, Vauxhall has tuned the steering and suspension characteristics to suit their standards. This has resulted in a similar level of ride compliancy but the 3008 felt a shade more agile in its overall handling. The worst potholes do create thumps and bumps felt inside the cabin but not to any real detrimental effect. Higher speed cruising on better road surfaces is comfortable for both versions.
Like the 3008 the Vauxhall Grandland is 4,477mm long, 1,856mm wide and 1,069mm high with a 514-litre boot with all five seats in use. Fold down the 60/40 split rear seat backs and this grows to a very useful 1,652-litres. The braked towing weight is 1,350kg, 50kg less than the comparable 3008 variant. The Grandland’s standard core specification includes Vauxhall’s popular OnStar automatic crash response SOS system with Wi-Fi hot spot, smartphone connectivity, stolen vehicle assistance and vehicle diagnostic functions. Also standard is the IntelliLink connectivity with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, a 7-inch touchscreen, Bluetooth, dual zone air-con, cruise control, lane departure warning, LED daytime running lights, rear parking sensors, remote locking with alarm and 17-inch alloy wheels plus of course electrically operated windows and door mirrors. |
From the outside you can see the similarity of the Grandland X to the Peugeot 3008 and they are both built on the same PSA Group production lines in France. The Grandland X has a different face following the Vauxhall family line but the front remains upright with the central grille flanked by sleek headlights. Move around the vehicle and there are the same sculptured doors as the 3008, the plastic cladding around the wheelarch edges and over the door sills, there is a slightly rising waistline and at the rear remodelled bumpers which differentiate the Grandland and 3008 variants.
Inside there is a much more noticeable difference in the front of the vehicle. Whereas the Peugeot 3008 has the futuristic i-Cockpit striking multi-layered dashboard, much of it seemingly fabric covered with prominent elevated central touchscreen, the Grandland has a simplified less fussy moulded fascia with soft-touch vinyl and neat printed stitching lines. The touchscreen is centrally positioned and inset into the fascia panel and most of the controls and switchgear are Vauxhall rather than Peugeot. Unlike the 3008 where many of the main functions need to be operated through the touchscreen, the items such as heating and ventilation controls are separate to the touchscreen in the Grandland which is much more user-friendly. Also the Grandland has a conventional and larger multi-function steering wheel, not the same as the much smaller diameter wheel used for the Peugeot 3008. The downside to this for the Grandland is that that 3008 has sharper steering responses |
Some of the additions the most popular Sport Nav specification level has includes an 8-inch touchscreen, full European sat-nav mapping, voice control, a Flex-Floor height adjustable boot floor, 18-inch alloy wheels, front and rear bodywork skid plates, tinted rear windows, powered tailgate, electrically folding door mirrors, front parking sensors, the Safety Pack which includes driver drowsiness alerts, forward collision protection, automatic emergency braking, and lane keep assist plus there is side blind-spot alert and keyless entry functions.
First impressions
Vauxhall has made a bold prediction that the Grandland X will become its second best-seller to private buyers after the Corsa and I think they are going to be proved correct, writes Robin Roberts.
Everything about the Grandland X seems right at this time, powertrain choices which are economical and deliver good performance, and cleverly packaged in to a roomy and versatile body with modern and stylish interior but not over-engineered and it does look different to it’s donor platform.
In particular, we loved the 1.2 petrol engine, multi-award winning Engine of the Year, and matched with ideal ratios in the six-speed manual gearbox it’s a smooth, quiet and yet responsive unit. While the Grandland X is a big family car in the modern sense, the engine and gearbox coped very well with two adults and so long as you anticipate road situations and get into the best gear for them the performance keeps coming. Get it wrong and the progress tails away so you have to work box and engine harder, which affects economy and noise.
Officially the top speed 117mph with a zero to 60mph acceleration time of 11.1-seconds. The Combined Cycle fuel consumption figure is 55.4mpg and on our test drive around The Chiltern hills and M40 motorway the real-life figure was 42.7mpg.
We also had a short drive in the Grandland X with the 1.6-litre, four cylinder 120hp/300Nm turbodiesel engine with the manual gearbox and the same spec level which costs £25,950. Our test drive returned 56.4mpg, still well short of the official figure but realistically impressive in the real driving world.
There is virtually nothing to choose in the driving performance between this refined diesel engine and the petrol unit except the diesel model costs £1,355 more to buy but its better fuel economy and lower insurance rating will recoup that extra cost in time.
Although carrying the same technical DNA, the Grandland X has a 3 year/ 60,000 mileage warranty compared to the Peugot 3008’s 3 year/ unlimited cover so you’ll have to very carefully weigh up the two before you buy, looking at the prices and specifications and cherry-picking the best to suit needs.
It might come down to exterior and interior looks and that is something only you can favour as the Grandland X hits showrooms from the end of November and then you can haggle over the prices in a market which is desperate to do business.
MILESTONES
Vauxhall Grandland X Sport Nav, 1.2 Turbo petrol 130hp, manual £24,595
Engine/transmission: 1.2-litre, 3-cylinder, turbocharged direct injection petrol, 130hp, 230Nm of torque from 1,750rpm, 6-speed manual, plus £200 IntelliGrip traction option
Performance: 117mph, 0-60mph 11.1-seconds, Combined Cycle 55.4mpg (42.7mpg on test), CO2 117g/km, VED First year road tax £160 then £140 Standard rate, BiK company car tax 22%
Insurance Group: 15E Warranty: 3-years/60,000-miles
Dimensions/capacities: L 4,477mm, W 1,856mm, H 1,609mm, boot/load space 514 to 1,652-litres, braked towing weight 1,350kg, 5-doors/5-seats
For: An important mid-sized SUV addition to the Vauxhall line-up courtesy of its partnership with PSA Peugeot-Citroen, high spec, brilliant PSA Group engine options, roomy, comfortable, practical and well laid out logical and easy to use controls
Against: Doesn’t have the unlimited mileage warranty of the Peugeot 3008, exterior front end bland styling, first customer deliveries not until January 2018.
© David Miles & WheelsWithinWales