Recent Updates

 

10/18/2023 12:00 PM

How fast do electric cars really charge?

 

10/18/2023 12:00 PM

UK government urged to improve roads in north and Midlands

 

10/18/2023 12:00 AM

From the archive: on this day in 1928

 

10/17/2023 12:00 AM

Toyota C-HR

 

10/17/2023 12:00 AM

Mercedes-AMG GLC 63 S E Performance

 

10/16/2023 12:00 PM

Power List 100 2023 - Chinese automakers

 

10/16/2023 12:00 PM

Power List 100 2023 - Board-level designers

 

10/16/2023 12:00 PM

Alfa Romeo design boss hints at luxury electric MPV

 

10/16/2023 12:00 PM

New Mercedes CLA Shooting Brake to lead compact car shake-up

 

10/16/2023 12:00 PM

New Volvo EM90 design revealed ahead of 12 November debut

<<    230   231   232   233   234   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6254   Next >
Subaru Outback
Friday, Oct 06, 2023 12:00 PM
subaru outback review 2023 01 cornering front If you need a rugged estate then this is now just about the only game in town Amid the barrage of new models – often electric – it can be easy to forget the handful of smaller independent brands still managing to carve their own path. This all-new generation of the Subaru Outback came out in 2021 but somehow slipped through our net. That appears to be equally true for media as it is for consumers. In 2022, Subaru sold a mere 1391 cars in the UK. That’s behind Alfa Romeo and Bentley, and only just above newcomer Genesis. It hasn’t helped that the brand has lacked any kind of halo car for a number of years. The WRX STI (née Impreza) went off sale in 2017 and never received a successor. Although Subaru still makes a WRX complete with a turbocharged flat four and a manual gearbox, it has chosen not to offer that car in Europe.That is perhaps understandable since hyper-hatches like the Volkswagen Golf R made it rather redundant. However, given how quickly the Toyota GR86 sold out, UK enthusiasts probably would have snapped up a few BRZs as well. Alas, Subaru has decided that is not how it wants to profile itself in the UK. Those cars have “nothing to do with the Subaru brand as it is today”, then UK managing director John Hurtig told Autocar in 2020. So what does Subaru stand for these days? The Outback should be a pretty good exemplar. As with previous generations, it’s a no-nonsense lifted estate car with some off-road credentials. Unusually for 2023, it’s powered by a 2.5-litre petrol flat four that lacks not only electrification but also turbocharging. That sort of thing is always going to be quite a niche proposition, but one that might well be very fit for its specific purpose.Range at a glanceModelsPowerFrom2.5i Lineartronic167bhp£36,990TransmissionCVT European Outback buyers don’t get a choice of engines. A naturally aspirated 2.5-litre boxer is the only option, and it always drives all four wheels through a CVT.There are three trim levels: Limited, Field and Touring.
< Prev    of 6254   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields