The Mercury

KUV needs a little more refinement

Mahindra’s KUV100 is the Indian brand’s take on crossover/hatch

- JESSE ADAMS

EVEN if the end result is a little awkward it’s easy to see what Mahindra’s trying to do here. The KUV100 introduced to our market in June is the Indian brand’s take on small crossover/hatch design, with Nissan Juke-esque body curves mish-mashed together with Ford Ecosport-like dimensions.

From some angles the look is quite funky – namely the front where its slitty grille and wraparound headlights borrow some styling cues from Range Rover’s Evoque.

But, its side profile is let down by a set of especially dinky 14-inch wheels and tyres which give an illusion of top-heaviness.

Mahindra throws the term SUV around quite liberally in the KUV’s press material, but at only 3.6m long and 1.6m tall it hardly qualifies as a genuine sports ute. In fact it’s also a bit smaller than the Ecosport, and is more on par with your average B-segment hatchback.

Ground clearance is above average though, and at 170mm it’ll bomb along a rocky road without much risk of ripping bits of undercarri­age off. Its suspension feels tuned for scarred third-world surfaces with soft dampers and squidgy springs that laugh off most potholes, though it does bob with every gear change and lean excessivel­y around traffic circles. The electrical­ly-assisted power-steering is vague to say the least, but an especially tight turning circle is a redeeming factor. I pulled off a remarkable U-turn on Melville’s 7de Laan, on a busy Friday night nogal. No mean feat, that.

Our test car was a 1.2 mFalcon D75 K8 model (bizarre but true) which, when translated from Mahindra to English, means top of the range turbodiese­l. Power comes from a 1 198cc three-cylinder with outputs of 57kW and 190Nm, and while it looks weak on paper it actually performs quite nicely. Torque delivery is almost instantane­ous, with a broad rev range that spreads evenly across five forward gears.

There’s no trip computer so measuring average fuel consumptio­n was done the old-fashioned way with odometer readings and a calculator. After a week-long test the KUV returned a respectabl­e average of just over 6 litres per 100km.

Pity then, that it sounds like a wood chipper full of wheel nuts. This is one of the loudest turbodiese­ls we’ve come across, exacerbate­d by gearing which has the engine revving high in open-road driving. A lack of sound deadening material also means the engine clatter echoes through the cabin at all times. Refined this mFalcon is certainly not.

Cabin quality is also disappoint­ing, and though we can forgive the dominant drab colour (some Asian markets love beige/grey interiors) its chintzy plastics won’t cut it against similarly priced rivals. Our test car was also specced with optional vinyl seat covers which not only fit very poorly, but also prohibit use of the folding rear seat backs.

The steering is height but not reach adjustable so some taller drivers might find the seating position a little compromise­d. A dashboardm­ounted manual gearlever adds to the KUV’s quirk factor, but also requires a further forward driver’s seat than usual. The controls seemed to suit my average-sized frame, but a poorly placed handbrake will irk whatever body size is behind the wheel. It’s an old-school bakkie type ratchet below the dash that’s impossible to use without jamming knuckles.

Besides that one ergonomic disaster the rest of the place is quite well thought out. Three simple HVAC control knobs are as easy to reach as they are to understand. I also liked the uncomplica­ted stereo system with a basic black and white LCD display, and pairing my phone for phone calls and audio playback was very straightfo­rward. Bluetooth connectivi­ty and steering wheel controls come standard in the K8 as well as middle-spec K6 KUV100s.

Remote central locking is also standard, but would intermitte­ntly refuse to work in our test car. Glitches sometimes happen, but we’ve heard other journalist­s reported the same problem on their petrol-powered KUV. A stiff gearshift seems to be another intermitte­nt problem with the KUV. The vehicle we drove on the media launch in June was afflicted with this problem, but the gears moved smoothly in the car we drove for this road test. VERDICT Mahindra’s KUV100 comes with decent spec levels and a raised ride height that’s desirable in the budget hatch segment these days, but its awkward styling and cheap interior will play against it.

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 ??  ?? Funky grille, weird side styling lines and dinky wheels give KUV an odd look.
Funky grille, weird side styling lines and dinky wheels give KUV an odd look.

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