All black men are thieves.
All Jews would sell their mothers for a pound.
All Muslims are suicide bombers and everyone in Ireland is as thick as a
slab of cheese.
Yes. Right.
And everyone with an SUV is
a stick-thin blonde whose head is so full of useless social engagements that
she can’t actually be bothered to steer round other cars, street furniture
or bus shelters.
It ain’t necessarily so. All
sorts of people buy 4x4s for all sorts of reasons. And contrary to what the
global warmists
would have us believe, only some are stick-thin blonde women who won’t actually
stop until the underside of their
car is so jammed up with run-over pedestrians the wheels won’t go round any
more.
The wave of hatred, then, that
engulfs the 4x4 is nothing more than ill informed prejudice.
And what makes my blood boil is that things are getting worse.
I do not have much time for
people who get dressed up in camouflage clothing and take to the countryside
in their
Land Rovers to see who can get most covered in mud. This is as ridiculous
as pushing a kettle over a frozen lake.
I wouldn’t want to stop them doing it, though, partly because they’d all
be at home otherwise, downloading unusual
images from the internet, but mostly because it’s fairly harmless.
Oh no it isn’t, say the ramblists.
They argue that off roading is noisy and causes polar bears to drown.
One group, the Yorkshire Dales Green Lanes Alliance, says that taking a vehicle
for the purposes of fun onto a
green lane should be “an offence”.
Now, even if we ignore the difficulties
of policing such a law, or of making a case stick in the courts
- “I wasn’t doing it for fun” is hard to disprove - we are left astounded
at the narrow-mindedness of these people.
Not even the communists or the Nazis attempted to make “fun” an offence.
And unfortunately it doesn’t
end here because those of a four-wheel-drive disposition are being targeted,
not only in
the countryside, but in towns as well with local councils saying now that
anyone who drives a large car on the school
run must pay $150 a year for the privilege.
This is insane. Like many parents,
my wife and I have a big, seven-seater Volvo, not because we used to lie awake
at night dreaming of the day when we could own such a thing, and not because
we always wanted, more than anything,
a car that sounds like a power boat. No. We have it because we are part of
a school-run car-sharing scheme.
And the fact is this: by filling
our Volvo with six children every morning, we are keeping three other cars
off the road.
So why should we pay more than someone who takes just two kids to school
in a Mini?
In reality, a Mini takes up
exactly the same amount of space on the road as a Volvo XC90, so therefore,
it should be the
Mini driver who’s made to pay a premium while those of us with large, high-occupancy
vehicles, are allowed to proceed
for free.
I mean it. I would far rather own a Cooper S than a Volvo.
It is better looking, nicer
to drive, cheaper to run and cheaper to buy. But I don’t. I sacrifice my love
of driving, my love of
cars and the contents of my bank for the public good. I should therefore
be rewarded with gifts, free passage and some
thank-you letters from the world’s polar bears.
Yes, I know I’m supposed to
make my children go to school on the bus, but I can’t - for three reasons.
One, they’d get lost. Two, they’d catch a disease. And three, there isn’t
one.
So, if you are in the same boat
as me, and you fancy the idea of a school-run-sharing seven-seater, there
are many choices,
and almost all of them are terrible in some way.
The Audi Q7 is ugly.
The Land Rover Discovery weighs more than the moon.
The Ford Edge, while attractive and good to drive, is a mini people carrier
. . . and I’m sorry but nothing says you’ve given
up in life quite so spectacularly as a car designed entirely to be practical.
It’s motoring’s equivalent of tartan zip-up slippers.
Small wonder, then, the XC90
is almost a part of the school uniform these days.
It has a reputation for safety. With a towbar on the back, it’ll pull a horsebox.
I even have a friend who fitted winter tyres and
uses it for shooting. But there is one problem. When it first came out, it
was good value at less than $60,000.
But now the top models are nudging $90,000 or more. And that makes it even
more expensive than a packet of pasta.
Which is why my eye was drawn
last week to the new Mitsubishi Outlander. Here we have a car that seems to
do everything
the Volvo does, in a smaller package, for less money. A lot less.
I do not know how such a low
price is possible when, so far as I can see, a cut of the profits will be
going to every
car firm in the world.
The Outlander, amazingly, is
based on the same platform as the Mitsubishi Evo X. But the car itself was
designed in
conjunction with Mercedes-Benz when it was in bed with Chrysler, so it shares
a great many bits and pieces with the
Dodge Nitro, a silly car for silly Americans.
Then there’s the French connection.
The Outlander, having been designed in America, Japan and Germany, is being
built
in conjunction with Peugeot and Citroën, which offer their own versions
of the same car. And the 2 litre turbodiesel engine
is made by Volkswagen.
No matter: despite the United Nations nature of the background, the end result is quite good.
We’ll deal with the drawbacks
first, and that means we have to start in the trunk, where there is an essay
on how the rear
seats should be raised and lowered from the floor. I think it’s designed
to be difficult, because then you’ll never actually
discover that when the seats are in place there’s no rear legroom, at all,
and not much boot left either.
It’s best, then, that on a shared school run, to put the kids you don’t like very much back there.
Next is the four-wheel-drive
system. Most of the time you’re in two-wheel drive and that doesn’t really
work when the car
is fully loaded. Every time you put your foot down, the front end goes light,
the driven wheels lose their grip and everything,
for a little while, goes all wobbly. Best, I think, to hang the extra fuel
consumption and leave it in 4WD all the time.
And that’s it. Those are the
drawbacks. All two of them. The rest of the car is well made, well equipped,
well trimmed and
fitted with Mitsubishi’s brilliant sat nav system. I also think it is good
looking and it feels much lighter and more responsive
than you might imagine.
Of course, it’s not as much fun as a Mini, it’s not as practical as a Volvo.
But as an overall package, it’s
a good way of getting into a car-sharing scheme, but look at it this way
- you’ll save the planet,
keep the polar bears alive, cut congestion and, best of all, on the mornings
when it’s not your turn, have a lie-in.
Vital statistics
Model Outlander 2.2 DI-DC Diamond Diesel.
Engine 2179cc, four cylinders
Power 154bhp @ 4000rpm
Torque 280 lb ft @ 2000rpm
Transmission Six-speed manual
Fuel 38.7mpg (combined cycle)194g/km
Acceleration 0-62mph: 9.9sec
Top speed 124mph
Price $50,000
Rating
Verdict Good for the
Earth and your pocket