Showing posts with label Polestar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polestar. Show all posts

20 Feb 2015

2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid Review

Matt Hubbard reviews the Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid, which is actually a plug-in hybrid.

2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

The future of motoring is slowly taking shape in front of our eyes.  The basics of car design will continue to be refined but will essentially remain as it is - seats, body, wheels, power unit. The fundamental problem in future cars comes down to one of energy storage both at car and distribution level.

Petrol and diesel are relatively easy to extract and refine and extremely easy to transport and store. Once in the car it stays where it's meant to until it is used, at which point it is quick and easy to replace. Enough can be stored in a car to give a range of hundreds of miles without the need to refuel.

Petrol and diesel also have a large amount of energy stored within their mass, and extracting that energy is as easy as setting fire to it.

Emerging technologies and fuels have to match existing fuels in terms of storage, range and price - or else the market will not adopt them.

Electricity is in many ways a better fuel than anything else to power a car. It requires few moving parts in the drive train and will ultimately lead to lower running costs. It also provides a smoother driving experience and produces no pollution when it is used (although it sometimes produces lots when generated).

But mankind has yet to suss out the problem of quickly refuelling a car with electricity, and storing enough on board to match the range of a fossil fuelled car. Until that happens electric vehicles are folly.

And until that point we are stuck with hybrids which utilise electricity until such point it runs out, whereafter a petrol or diesel engine takes over. The two engines can also be combined for more and better power delivery.
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

Some companies (Toyota and Honda) have been making hybrids for years whilst others resisted (mainly due to being smaller companies with lower R&D budgets) and waited until the technology was mature enough that it cost less to introduce it.

Nowadays most manufacturers have at least one hybrid in their range. Some hybrids look the same as any other car and some look...different. Some cost a little bit more than a standard car whilst others cost the earth.

Volvo has taken the approach of making its hybrid V60 look the same as any other V60 - to an almost fanatical degree - but it does cost the earth.

Volvo has also taken the bold approach of giving its hybrid more performance than the rest of the range. Until the V60 Polestar came along the V60 Hybrid was the most powerful, as well as most expensive, V60 you could buy.

If you want to know what the standard car is like read my review of the Volvo V60 D3 here, and you can check out my V60 Polestar review here.

Visually the Hybrid is almost identical to any other V60. The only differentiators are small 'Plug-In Hybrid' badges on the front quarter panels, an extra fuel flap, a much higher boot floor and more badges on the door sills.

The extra fuel flap (under which is a plug) and badges mean this is a plug-in hybrid, which means you can charge the battery up (in around 3 hours) and it'll provide around 30 miles of purely electric motoring. That leads to an official economy figure of155mpg and emissions of 48g/km of CO2. Stunningly low but meaningless in the real world.
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

In practice the V60 D6 Hybrid is a sensible, practical, fast, economical, cheap to run car that costs a lot but has a few benefits over a standard car.

The only real inconvenience is the reduced boot area. My border collie came for a ride and wasn't too impressed with having to stoop down low in the boot. A V60's boot floor is quite high in the first place. In the hybrid, with even more height, it looks (and is) a bit ridiculous.

The battery and electric motor live under the boot floor - hence the height - and power the rear wheels which means in certain modes the car is four wheel drive. Of course, the diesel engine up front powers the front wheels.

The electric motor has 70bhp and the diesel engine has 215bhp. Select the Power setting and the V60 hybrid is a 275bhp, 471b ft, four wheel drive continent crushing estate car with the comfiest seats in the business and a fabulous interior.

Power and torque are felt from low down, with minimal lag away from the line. The gearbox is sweet and the steering slightly heavier than you'd expect. Steering feedback and handling are lacking in favour of a smooth ride and safe understeer but boot the throttle and it's fast, grippy and great fun.  With all that grunt you can overtake where you couldn't in most cars.

Select the Pure setting and it'll use the electric motor as much as possible, resorting to diesel assistance only when you press the accelerator more than about 50%. I found myself driving in EV mode through towns and villages and pressing POWER when hitting the 60 zones in between.
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

Trying not to allow the diesel engine to kick in gives an added dimension to driving the car. Gently does it on the throttle and keep momentum up as much as possible makes boring roads slightly more interesting.

In between Power and Pure you can just drive the V60 as a hybrid, with the diesel and electric engines operating independently or together depending on your speed and heaviness of right foot.

I tested the EV mode and battery capacity on a run. On purely electric power I drove 6 miles round twisting country lanes and 14 miles at 65mph on the motorway before the battery was exhausted and the diesel engine kicked in. After another 20 miles the battery had replenished one third of its capacity which allowed me to cruise another few miles in EV mode.

You can feel the extra 200kg weight of the hybrid system when driving round bends but not so much when braking. The brake pedal feels strange at first as it is both battery regenerator and conventional discs n'pads brake.
Kes in the Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

The diesel engine is the old 2.4 litre unit which was never the most refined or economical of engines. The Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid is a fantastic car to drive - I'd happily own one if it didn't cost so much - but it could be improved massively by using the new D4 2.0 engine. In Power mode you'll average 35mpg if you drive enthusiastically.

Volvo has shown its hand and that means its hybrids will not be radically different cars from the rest of its range. Instead Volvo acknowledges hybrids as being a mainstream part of the medium-term future of motoring - so why make them different?

We'll see a hybrid in the new XC90 SUV and soon after most of the Volvo range be available with hybrid engines (and probably EVs too).  That this, the first Volvo hybrid, is such a good one bodes well.

As an experiment, and a car that will mostly be bought by early adopters who don't want to look too different, the V60 Hybrid is a resounding success that could be improved in a couple of areas, namely by using a better engine and by packaging the battery better.
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

Stats


Price - £46,675 (£54,075 as tested)
Engine - 2.4 litre diesel plus electric motor 
Transmission - 6-speed automatic 
0-60mph - 6.1 seconds 
Top speed - 143mph 
Power - 215bhp diesel, 70bhp electric - 275bhp total
Torque - 324lb ft diesel, 147lb ft electric - 471lb ft/640Nm total
Economy - 155mpg CO2 - 48g/km 
Kerb weight - 2058kg
2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

2015 Volvo V60 D6 Hybrid

By Matt Hubbard


16 May 2014

Volvo V60 Polestar Review

Matt Hubbard drives the Volvo V60 Polestar, a limited edition, super-hot Volvo estate.

Volvo V60 Polestar

What the hell is Polestar?  In short it's a company that started out as a race team in 1996, grew to produce various concept Volvos and has now teamed up with Volvo to produce a 350hp, all wheel drive production Volvo called the V60 Polestar. Polestar is still racing and won the 2013 Swedish Touring Car Championship in an S60.

The name is a bad joke, it comes from Polestar's race team origins as well as being named after the Pole Star. Pole star, pole position star. Get it?

The car's no joke though, in fact it's one of the best hot estates on the market, and it comes with built in exclusivity.  The car will be made alongside other Volvos on the production lines (a combination of S60s and V60s) and with the usual Volvo support and warranty but only 750 will be made, and only 125 will come to the UK, and all will be V60 estates.

On casual inspection the V60 Polestar looks like any other highly specced V60. Look a little closer and you notice the unique Polestar additions such as the 20" wheels, blue stitching in the seats, carbon fibre dash trim, Nubuk inlays in the seats, doors and armrest and various Polestar logos dotted around.

Outside and the most obvious, but still quite subtle, additions are the Polestar bumper and chin-spoiler, rear diffuser and roof spoiler. These were honed in Volvo wind tunnels and the spoilers and diffuser each add 20kg of downforce.
Volvo V60 Polestar

But it's under the skin where Polestar has made the most changes over standard Volvos.

The suspension is completely new and includes adjustable Öhlins DFV (Dual Flow Valve) dampers, 80% stiffer springs, stiffer mountings and bushes and carbon fibre reinforcement of the front strut brace.

The Haldex four wheel drive system has been calibrated for more rearward bias. How much? It's naturally 50:50 but 100% can be sent to the rear wheels (or front) if necessary.

The 6-speed automatic (sadly not dual clutch) gearbox has been calibrated for faster gearshifts, curve hold (reduces pitch in-corner) and launch control.  The launch control system is super easy to use and means anyone can replicate the car's 0-60 in 4.8 seconds.

The engine is the 3 litre, inline-6 T6 with a Borg Warner twin-scroll turbo that produces 350hp and 500Nm/369lb/ft of torque.  The turbo and engine tuning have been designed to produce huge torque from low down and across the rev range - max torque is available from 3,000-4,750rpm.

The exhaust is a 2.5 inch stainless steel unit with 3.5 inch tail pipes - and sounds brilliant.

6-pot brakes and Michelin Pilot Supersport tyres complete the mix.
Volvo V60 Polestar

So what is it like to drive?

Well, it's like any other V60.  At first.  The ride is smooth and the drive refined.  Check out my V60 D3 R-Design review to find out what levels of comfort and interior quality you can expect.  Then push a little further and the V60 Polestar is about as fast and unflappable as a race car disguised as a practical estate should be.

So take one top-spec V60 (and I mean absolutely every single option box ticked, the V60 Polestar costs £49,775 but a fully specced V60 D5 R-Design costs £45k without the Polestar bits) and make it really, really powerful and capable and you have an idea of what this car is.

In a straight line it is simply fast. 0-120mph takes 16.7 seconds.  The automatic gearbox is quick to change but does have the very slight delay of a normal (i.e. not dual clutch) gearbox.  However the launch control makes up for this.

In some cars launch control is super-complicated but in the V60 Polestar you simply turn ESC off, put your foot on the brake then press the throttle, wait a second and let go. What's more as it's an auto you can do this again and again because it doesn't have a clutch plate to wear out.

Find a corner and it pulls around it in a much more capable fashion than you'd expect an 1,800kg estate to do.  The suspension provides for great feedback but it's also supple and refined and never harsh or crashy.

Hit the brakes and it doesn't have immediate initial bite. Press further and it's feelsome and has huge stopping power.  This is because race drivers have engineered the brakes and race cars don't have fake, over-servoed brakes but rather you feel what the brakes are doing.  Need to stop faster? Press some more.  Simple.
Volvo V60 Polestar

As well as a ton of road miles I drove the car on the Top Gear test track at Dunsfold.  The Hammerhead is a left, right corner which has been specifically designed to highlight understeer and oversteer.  The V60 Polestar entered the Hammerhead on the brakes and turned in to the initial sharp left with a ton of grip.

Flip right for the increasing radius meat of the corner and the wheels screech the whole way through as power is applied and third gear selected as we really get going.  Speed is dramatically increased and the car is at the limit of adhesion, with the Haldex system sending power rearwards, but unless you cock the entry up (as I did once) it stays neutral throughout the entire complex.

Very impressive, very refined, very competent.

The Follow Through and Bentley are the following corners and are super-fast.  These highlight high-speed stability and through both the V60 Polestar was rock solid.

Before setting out on track I was chauffeured by Thed Björk, multiple race winner and current Swedish Touring Car Champion.  Most race drivers drive like complete nut jobs with journalists in the passenger seat, but Thed took it easy.  His laps were fast, but composed.

This is the essence of the Volvo V60 Polestar.  Fast, composed, subtle, refined.  It is a car that has been designed by race drivers, but race drivers who want to drive the car on the road, to relax when they want and to raise the adrenaline levels when that is called for.

Which is why the V60 Polestar is quite simply brilliant.

Hopefully we'll see more Volvo Polestars in the future.  Polestar is an independent company which is funded by Volvo to go racing and to provide R&D, design and engineering for its road cars.  The V60 Polestar may only be available in limited quantities but the fundamental basis of its construction is that is quite easily scalable.

We could soon see another performance brand joining the likes of AMG, Audi RS, M-Sport and Alpina.  On the basis of the V60 Polestar this is a good thing.

The Volvo V60 Polestar is available to order now and will be in Volvo dealers from October.

NB - The car I drove was a pre-production left hand drive model. The UK V60s will be right hand drive and will get Polestar logos in the wheel centre caps.

Stats


Price - £49,775
Engine - 3-litre, inline-6, turbocharged petrol
Transmission - 6-speed automatic 
0-60mph - 4.8 seconds 
Top speed - 155 mph (limited)
Power - 350 hp 
Torque - 369 lb ft 
Economy - 27.7 mpg 
CO2 - 237 g/km 
Kerb weight - 1,881 kg
Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar

Review by Matt Hubbard


27 Nov 2013

This Is The Volvo V60 Polestar And It's Got 350hp

This is the Volvo V60 Engineered by Polestar and it'll be available from June 2014.

Volvo V60 Polestar
Polestar used to be Volvo's racing operation but now they're a fully fledged in-house tuning company and this will be the first mainstream product of their work.

The V60 Polestar takes a V60 estate chassis (already a good car) and adds four wheel drive, a more rigid chassis, 80% stiffer springs, Öhlins shocks, 371mm 6-pot Brembo brakes, aerodynamics, 20" Polestar wheels, a unique interior and a tuned T6 engine.

The engine develops 350hp and 369lb ft of torque.  It gets a new twin-scroll turbo and a 2.5 inch stainless steel exhaust.

0-62 mph takes 4.9 seconds.

Polestar knows how to turn normal Volvos into fast cars.  I took a passenger ride up the Goodwood Hill in the Polestar S60 concept.  The driver was one of the development team who worked on the new V60 Polestar.

Expect further Polestar versions of Volvo models.

You may like:

Why the German Big Three could become the European Big Five
Volvo V60 D3 R-Design review
In-car in the Polestar S60 up the Goodwood Hill
Volvo V60 Polestar

Volvo V60 Polestar interior

Volvo V60 Polestar

Article by Matt Hubbard


12 Nov 2013

What Has Polestar Got Up It's Sleeve?

This post has just appeared on the Polestar Facebook page:




It wouldn't have anything to do with the V60 Polestar recently caught testing almost undisguised at the Nurburgring would it?

Article by Matt Hubbard

28 Oct 2013

Why the German Big Three could become the European Big Five

BMW, Mercedes and Audi are the German Big Three.  They have dominated the premium car scene for decades and are all now creeping into other sectors, compounding their positions.

15 Oct 2013

Volvo is developing a new V60 Polestar

Autoblog has captured a new Volvo V60 Polestar being tested at the Nurburgring.  Painted in Rebel Blue the Polestar V60 is expected to be powered by Volvo's 3-litre 6-cylinder turbocharged engine and produce in the order of 350bhp.

Volvo V60 Polestar 2014

11 Jul 2013

In-car video in the Polestar S60 up the hill at Goodwood FoS

I'd been invited to Goodwood Festival of Speed by Volvo, and as a bonus was able to take a trip up the hill in a Polestar S60.

Our chauffeur was one of the Polestar race drivers.  The run was at mid-day and he'd been doing rides up the hill every half hour since 9am.  This was the first time he'd had a clear track, so the ride was pretty awesome.

There are only 4 Polestar S60s in existence.  They're rated as having 508bhp but this one was tested last week and has 560bhp and 800Nm of torque.  It's essentially a race car in a standard S60 body, with all the usual comforts, but gets a 6-speed manual gearbox.

When the Polestar S60s have finished their promotional duties they will be sold for £300,000 each

18 Jun 2013

Volvo to join the V8 Supercars grid in 2014

2014 will see the return of Volvo to Australia's premier touring car series.  Whilst the rest of the world downsizes Australia continues with V8 Supercars and instead of using the generic V8 engine Volvo will use an adapted version of their own 4.4 litre V8.

Polestar will build the cars and engine and run the team.  The drivers have yet to be announced.

Volvo have history in touring car racing with entries in the BTCC and Australian touring cars - most famously at the Bathurst 1000 where they Jim Richards won in 1998 in an S40.

This move signals a further step in confidence for the Swedish company who have been increasingly pushing their revised model range through traditional advertising, social media and racing.

Another sign of Volvo's increased confidence is their V40 test drive challenge.  If customers test drive a Mercedes CLA 180 CDI and a Volvo V40 D2 R-Design back to back, and then choose to buy the Mercedes, Volvo will pay for the first month's payment.

I'll soon be running a Volvo V40 T5 for a week and will let you know if the reality lives up to the hype.  

Matt

13 Jun 2013

You could win Volvo's last ever C30 #LastEverC30

Volvo is getting pretty good at social media and they're using it to full effect in a competition to win the #LastEverC30 (see, told you they were getting good at it).

The last ever C30 has rolled off the production line and will be setting off from Gothenburg round abouts now (Thursday 13 June, 7am) to the UK.

The #LastEverC30 will arrive in the UK on Saturday 15 June where someone will win it.  For a chance to win the C30 check in at the website www.lasteverc30.co.uk and follow #LastEverC30 on Twitter.

The car itself is below.  It's an R-Design in Ice White with Polestar upgrade.

11 Apr 2013

Who says Volvo don't make sexy cars?

This is a promotional video for the Volvo V40. And it's a good one because the V40 is developed by the Polestar race drivers!

Thanks to Budda for the tip (ps Budda is a Volvo test driver too!)