Say hello to the Santa Fe a vehicle which is big and butch in a Korean-Euro style but has many in a dilemma as to whether its svelte style is that of a serious mud-plugger or it can pull it off with its overtly butch soft-roader appeal. This is key for the Santa Fe's move to dislodge such established runners as the Toyota Fortuner, the Honda CR-V and the Mitsubishi Outlander, all of which have stamped their mark among punters willing to splurge/invest (select choice of word as per one's inclination) in this class of the car market.
The introductory drive of the Linea with its new powerplant took the ZigWheels team to the airstrip at the Amby Valley City at Lonavla near Pune. While testing and experiencing the car on a 1.5 kilometre straight with cones thrown in to test the car?s response to change in direction was far from the perfect way to evaluate the new car, it did bring a lot of things into stark notice. To start with, the quickness of the T-Jet engine in a straight line is encouraging. We?ll still need to subject it to real words roads, in different gears and over different gradients, but preliminary impressions are good. The figures on paper are interesting too ? pumped by a 2.2 bar turbo, the 1.4-litre T-Jet engine makes 114PS of power at a high 5000 rpm, but also manages to churn out a startling 207Nm of torque, which is commendable for a small-displacement petrol engine. The T-Jet version also gets bigger 16-inch wheels and wider 205/55 tyres, which should aid handling sufficiently for the enhanced speeds.
In a nutshell, the experience when compared to the current versions of the Linea is much more exciting, and looks further in the direction of customer satisfaction, especially so for performance minded buyers. Our final tests on real roads and surfaces will be more telling, and the ultimate judgment on the car will depend on how Fiat prices the car, so log on to www.zigwheels.com for our report on the car, real soon!