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Saab 9-5 Vector 2.0T: review

  • By Philip King
  • The Australian
  • image

    After a shaky few years, the Swedish brand has a new luxury flagship.

Philip King road tests and reviews the Saab 9-5 Vector 2.0T.

It has been a long time since I've driven a Saab and even longer since I've driven one I liked. So long, in fact, that I can't really remember if there was one at all.

Under the stewardship of GM, the cars became bad, dull or hopelessly outdated. The previous 9-5 was a symptom of that regime. It lacked the upgrades needed to keep it relevant and fell behind the competition.

DESIGN

This car has at least as much GM involvement and, in gestation terms, has been ready for 12 months or more. But it does have a couple of advantages. It's much larger than its predecessor; the previous 9-5 was too close in size to the smaller 9-3. This car has generous rear seat room and a capacious, if shallow, boot.

Besides turbocharging, other Saab signatures are realised through the car's sheet metal, which has a distinctive cabin shape with visor-like glass. It looks like a Saab even without the liftback rear that used to be part of the formula.

Inside, the asymetrical speedo, grid-pattern vents, shapely seats and cockpit-style centre console also echo brand strengths. It's a pleasant place to be.

Trainspotters will notice the absence of a central ignition key slot and funky flip-out cupholders. Those will be a deal breaker for no one.

TECHNOLOGY

The underpinnings are good. Although they're shared with lesser brands such as Opel, the car's composure and chassis tuning feel up to segment standards. It feels solid and substantial.

VALUE

It's packed full of gear. There's not a lot missing from the spec sheet and an entry level car comes almost fully loaded. The list includes stuff that's now de rigueur, such as Bluetooth, as well as premium kit such as an informative head-up display. Active cruise control seems to be the main omission.

DRIVE

The range has been rationalised. Previously, there were almost as many Saab variants as buyers. This time it boils down to three engines: the petrol four-cylinder, driven here, a four-cylinder 2.0-litre diesel and 2.8-litre V6. All have turbocharging, a Saab signature, and the petrol four delivers surprisingly adequate, if unspectacular, performance.

Driving the front wheels via a six-speed transmission, it reaches 100km/h in 8.5 seconds. The V6 offers all-wheel drive but is a lot heavier.

Some will question the ride quality, though, which rumbles and thumps over road details, and the tyre roar generated by unfavourable tarmac. But on a first taste the 9-5 exceeded expectations. In a very real sense, the only way was up.

VERDICT

The 9-5 must redefine the brand for a new generation of buyers and it is at least in with a chance.

Read more about prestige motoring at The Australian.

SAAB 9-5 VECTOR 2.0T

Price: $75,900 plus on-road costs
Body: Large luxury sedan
Engine: 2.0-litre turbo-petrol four-cylinder
Outputs: 162kW at 4000rpm and 350Nm at 1750rpm
Transmissions: Six-speed automatic, front-wheel drive

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 6 comments

  • Go test drive one, and you will be hooked! Why be a Hun follower ( Audi, BMW, Merc) when you could be a leader in a cool Scandinavian design.

    Stephen Thompson KING of Gold Coast Posted on 14 June 2011 10:59pm
  • This car is stunning in the flesh. Went to a dealership to get some parts for my 9-3 SAAB. If only I had the cash and yes resale is an issue .

    New Saab Fanatic of Werribee VIC Posted on 25 May 2011 5:15pm
  • Better drive it while SAAB still exists.

    Richard W of Sydney Posted on 19 May 2011 5:44pm
  • 75k is too much for this one. Needs more pace.

    MikiG Posted on 15 May 2011 12:48pm
  • Phillip, 75K isn’t too unreasonable, considering this car’s ‘rivals’ are the 5-series, E-class & A6… However, resale is a very valid point - My uncle purchased a 3 year old 9-3 recently for less than 1/3 of what it’s brand new value was… hardly what you’d call solid, especially in WA. However, I think this car looks fantastic - a return to form for Saab, and I really hope that this quirky company get their mojo back completely & are able to support themselves… I’ll always have a special spot for Saabs, despite never owning one!

    small-car-dude of WA Posted on 13 May 2011 1:54pm
  • OMG , $75,000 and where do i get it serviced ,not many dealerships im betting ,  and its ugly ! a 3 year old BMW would be a better choice by far and resale ??? hmmm I smell ALFA romeo 1992 here

    Philip de-ath of melbourne Posted on 12 May 2011 11:32pm
Read all 6 comments

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