Volvo's most compact SUV, the XC40 was recently unveiled at
Milan last week. The new XC40 launches in the United States in the first
quarter of 2018 as the company’s third model line. It also marks the debut for
the new Compact Modular Architecture, which will go on to underpin all of
Volvo’s 40-series cars as well as the portfolio of Geely sub-brand Lynk &
Co.
The XC40 is designed to appeal to a younger audience than
Volvo’s more grown-up offerings, with exterior styling credited to Ian Kettle,
a 31-year-old Brit whose proposal was accepted in 2013 when he was just a year
out of the prestigious Royal College of Art design school. While there is a
strong family resemblance to Volvo’s bigger SUVs, it’s not meant to be a little
brother; distinctive XC40 details include an upswept rear side window, a
clamshell hood, and the sort of plastic wheel-arch cladding that has become
visual shorthand for a crossover in recent years. At 174.2 inches long, it’s
10.4 inches shorter than the XC60 but, at 65.2 inches high, just 0.1 inch
shorter, with a wheelbase of 106.4 inches, down 6.4 inches from the 2018 XC60.
It has been designed for big wheels, with 17-inchers the smallest standard
fitment and up to 20s offered as dealer options.
Engineering is conventional. The XC40 has steel
bodywork—including its liftgate and hood—and uses a strut front suspension and
a multilink rear setup. Two powertrains will be available from launch in the
United States, both using Volvo’s turbocharged 2.0-liter four-cylinder engine.
The entry-level T4 will be front driven, and the brawnier T5 will have
all-wheel drive via a part-time Haldex clutch on the rear axle. Volvo said the
T5 will have 250 horsepower and 258 lb-ft of torque but hasn’t released a power
output for the T4—although, based on the other models wearing a T4 badge, this
should be around 200 horsepower.
An eight-speed automatic gearbox will be standard in the
U.S.; there are no plans to offer the manual gearbox that lower-powered
versions will get in other markets. Nor will we see the 180-hp 2.0-liter diesel
that will be sold in Europe. A hybrid using the three-cylinder gasoline engine
and dual-clutch gearbox that Volvo told us about last year will follow shortly
afterward, and the company also said it will produce an electric version later.
Two trim levels will be available from launch, although the
official line is not to think of these as conventional trim levels. Each gets
its own selection of exterior color choices as well as generous standard
equipment. The cheaper Momentum version will have the option of a white roof as
well as—for the truly fashion forward—white mirror caps and white wheels. The
marginally more expensive R-Design will have a gloss-black roof as standard and
some sportier exterior details, including prominent exhaust tips. A
range-topping Inscription model will be added later.
Inside, the XC40 is more radical. All versions will come
with a 12.3-inch digital instrument cluster as well as the same 9.0-inch portrait-oriented
touchscreen fitted to the bigger XC60, with a similar degree of connectivity
including Apple CarPlay and Android Auto as standard. Interior trim materials
include textured plastic trim on the door panels and felt in the door pockets.
On the pre-production cars we saw, the dashboard panel featured an embossed
pattern based on a map of the Gothenburg area.
A predictable emphasis has been put on safety. All XC40s
will have automated emergency braking and pedestrian detection as part of a
collision-avoidance system that works at speeds up to 40 mph. This also
includes oncoming-lane mitigation, which will actively steer the car back to
the correct side of the road in the face of approaching traffic. An optional
IntelliSafe system includes Volvo’s semi-autonomous Pilot Assist, which can
work up to 81 mph, and a rear cross-traffic alert system that will
automatically brake if it detects an approaching vehicle when backing out of a
parking spot.
Pricing will kick off at $34,195 for the front-wheel-drive
T4 Momentum, which will not be available until later in 2018, and $36,195 for
the all-wheel-drive T5 Momentum, which will reach U.S. dealers early in the
year; the R-Design trim adds $2500 to either model. All XC40s will be produced
at Volvo’s Ghent plant.
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