Friday, July 26, 2013
Womens view Volvo V50 T5

These days I need a car which will suit the demands of my husband (an engine with a bit of poke), my 1 year old (plenty of room for toys and a decent car stereo so we can play the Teletubbies song again and againand again) and me (a big enough boot to carry home the spoils of my latest retail therapy session). Could the V50 provide all of that?
I dont know if its a girl thing, or a size thing (Im only 52"), or just because in the past most of my cars have been hatchbacks, but I sometimes find estate cars a bit overwhelming; they seem to go on for ages. But for an estate the V50 seems almost compact and bijou; perhaps just in comparison with the chunky V70, which to me is a proper estate car. This isnt to say that the V50 completely lacks storage space. Its slightly shorter than its predecessor, the V40, but its also taller and wider, so its more capacious than you might first think.
Certainly on a trip to the grandparents we managed to pack in travel cot, buggy, reams of baby wipes and nappies, a wardrobes worth of baby clothes (they get through a lot at this age), and a toothbrush and a clean pair of pants each for mummy and daddy. Not bad for a weekend away, although I think youd have trouble with a bigger family, and we did have to pack carefully. Theres not much leg-room in the back for adults or older children, particularly if the driver and front passenger are tall. The Scandinavians seem to have designed this one with the smaller family in mind; just enough room in the back for little Bjorns car seat, efficient air conditioning to keep you as cool as Sven Goran Erickson during a tabloid newspaper sex scandal, and a boot you could fill with enough jars of pickled herring to feed the whole family for a month.
On the retail therapy front, fold the back seats down and you could probably squeeze a Torksvig storage solution (flat-pack pine bookcase to you and me) in the boot. In an emergency the spare is nicely accessible, which makes it that bit easier for husband to change the wheel while I chat up the AA man.
Volvo have to me always represented safe but rather conservative design. So their new floating console comes straight out of left field, curving gently away from the rest of the dash and leaving thin air behind it. On this model it had a very strange semi-transparent finish, which I quite liked, although a veritable smorgasbord of different finishes including wood, aluminium and plastic are also available. The controls are good and chunky and easy to reach from the drivers seat, although the CD/radio looks far too complicated to muck about with once youre off.
Putting the ignition on the dashboard next to the steering wheel seems a bit strange because anyone with bigger hands than me, or even a larger key fob, would knock the indicators every time they fired the car up. The only major disappointment is the rest of the dashboard, a vast expanse of uninspiring grey plastic with a piddling glove box which is just big enough to keep the car manual in but not much else. Where do I put my maps, emergency wet wipes, torch, AA card, bottle of water, small but carefully chosen selection of CDs, tin of travel sweets? Certainly not in the equally tiny door pockets. But there are two very nice cup holders, so at least Ive got somewhere to rest my latte.
Upholstery is in grainy leather, more at the hard wearing end of the range than the luxurious executive end. While were on the subject of seats, the drivers seat goes up and down as well as backwards and forwards good news when youre a shorty like me. Its something of a novelty having a decent view over the steering wheel, rather than through it. The model I tried was the top of the range 2.
5-litre, 5 cylinder, 220bhp T5 SE. It also comes in four-wheel drive for those of you with off-road pretensions. Itll go from 0-60 in 6.9 seconds with a top speed of 149 miles per hour, which is perfect for getting the kids to school on time on those mornings when the alarm doesnt go off. Fuel consumption is pretty good for this size engine, with an average of 31mpg.
Easily. The V50 combines the quality and reliability youd expect from a Volvo, with some neat design touches and enough space for a small family. The T5 also delivers that extra bit of punch in the engine department. Dont however over-estimate the carrying capacity of this car; taking a family of five on a camping trip with bicycles, skis and granny in the back isnt going to happen in the V50.
£25,020 for the T5, but for those on a lower budget prices start from around £18,000 for a 1.8 S. Next to the comparable Alfa Sportwagon these prices stack up quite nicely, whilst being a good deal less than something like a BMW 3 Series Touring.