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Volvo XC60 D5 2009 review

Volvo Volvo XC60 Volvo XC60 2009 SUV Best SUV Cars Volvo SUV Range Luxury European
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EXPERT RATING
7.6
Photo of Neil Dowling
Neil Dowling

Contributing Journalist

5 min read

Or more correctly in this case, a step-down right into the gully for the front of the XC60.

This is because (a) the test route, in the flowing scrub-laden hills east of Perth, comprises ball-bearing gravel, and (b) the XC60 is not an off-road vehicle.

For the uninitiated, ball-bearing gravel is slippery. Oil has less anti-friction qualities and it's rumoured future gearboxes may use Perth gravel to improve cog smoothness.

Combine (a) and (b) and you get (c), stuck.

And it didn't take much. Just that slip to the left and the front fell into a gully where winter rains once washed. The rear left-side wheel promptly jammed itself against an incline.

Even the Volvo's traction system that proudly boasts the ability to switch power to the wheel with the most traction, couldn't pull it free.

It came out after getting a tug from one of the convoy's Land Cruisers but the psychological damage was done — this XC60 was not intended to travel trails.

If that was its low point, the new rival for the Audi Q5, BMW X3, VW Touareg and Lexus RX came up trumps with its breathtakingly sophisticated safety features and luxuriant comfort qualities.

If this is the `next big step` in car safety, what will Volvo wheel out in another 15 years? The only thing the XC60 doesn't do is steer itself.

When a car — or more correctly, the driver — changed from the right to left lane (the one occupied by me), the Volvo went into hysterics.

The red light ahead of the driver — the one that flashes on the windscreen when the car figures you're travelling too close to the car in front — illuminated, flashed and then an alarm sounded.

If you weren't awake by then, you were when the right foot hit the brake pedal and found it firmed and ready for the boot.

That saved the front end of the Volvo. On a smaller scale, sensors will also activate the brakes and prevent the car from accidentally rolling into the parked car ahead of you. That's called City Safety and it's standard on all XC60s, regardless of the model.

Many insurance companies — one exception being the RAC in WA — promptly offered premium savings of up to 10 per cent on the XC60 because of the crash avoidance qualities of City Safety.

But that's not all the XC60 has. There is a lane change warning — the latter using the same heart-wrenching alarm as the frontal impact warning — that monitors the white line down the edge of the road and senses you are drifting out of your lane.

There's also BLIS which is an acronym for cameras that monitor vehicles in your blind spots and can save a bingle in freeway traffic manoeuvres.

There are park sensors, too, for parking the unexpectedly large proportions of Volvo's medium-sized SUV.

Plus, there are ABS brakes with ESC, roll-over mitigation and protection, lots of airbags, seats that prevent the submarining and whip effects on the human body, and so on. It doesn't get much safer than this and only a complete idiot behind the wheel will come to grief.

But how does it drive? Despite its presentation as a medium-sized luxury SUV, the XC60 is 1.9-tonnes and is only 180mm shorter than the seven-seat XC90.

It feels — as a Volvo should — about as solid and secure on the road as any luxury saloon.

But it reveals its weight through corners. Though it's all-wheel drive, the system powers the front wheels and only drives the back when front slip is detected.

Handling is good but it's not really a machine to be hurried.

The engine is Volvo's long-standing five-cylinder turbo-diesel unit that has few vices and, despite pulling the XC60's portly weight, economical.

The six-speed automatic should get most of the credit because it provides a tight set of ratios that suit the engine's narrow rev range.

In the dirt the all-wheel drive comes into play. The XC60 feels as secure on gravel roads as it does on bitumen, enhanced by standard electronic stability control that minimises the front and rear from sliding out on corners.

It's also comfortable in a supple, rather than soft, manner with excellent sound suppression over the loose-stone roads.

Seating is for five and there's decent foot room in the rear thanks to a low centre tunnel.

The rear seats split and fold perfectly flat with the large cargo area set over a substantial wheel well with — unfortunately — a space-saver spare.

Cabin treatment is all Volvo with plenty of grained leather, simple white-on-black switchgear and high build quality.

The electronic park brake supersedes the awkward foot-operated system on other XC models and is a perfect accompaniment to the car's upmarket presentation.

Specs

Price: $64,450

Engine: 2.4-litre, inline 5-cyl, turbo-diesel

Power: 136kW @ 4000rpm

Torque: 400Nm @ 2000-2750rpm

Performance: 0-100km/h: 9.9 seconds, top speed: 200km/h

Economy (official): 8.3 litres/100km, (tested): 9.7 litres/100km

Emissions: 219g/km (Corolla: 175g/km)

Transmission: 6-speed automatic, sequential; constant 4WD

Volvo XC60 2009: D5 2.4

Engine Type Diesel Turbo 5, 2.4L
Fuel Type Diesel
Fuel Efficiency 8.5L/100km (combined)
Seating 5
Price From $6,600 - $9,350
Safety Rating

Pricing Guides

$6,995
Based on 12 cars listed for sale in the last 6 months.
LOWEST PRICE
$2,000
HIGHEST PRICE
$10,999
Photo of Neil Dowling
Neil Dowling

Contributing Journalist

GoAutoMedia Cars have been the corner stone to Neil’s passion, beginning at pre-school age, through school but then pushed sideways while he studied accounting. It was rekindled when he started contributing to magazines including Bushdriver and then when he started a motoring section in Perth’s The Western Mail. He was then appointed as a finance writer for the evening Daily News, supplemented by writing its motoring column. He moved to The Sunday Times as finance editor and after a nine-year term, finally drove back into motoring when in 1998 he was asked to rebrand and restyle the newspaper’s motoring section, expanding it over 12 years from a two-page section to a 36-page lift-out. In 2010 he was selected to join News Ltd’s national motoring group Carsguide and covered national and international events, launches, news conferences and Car of the Year awards until November 2014 when he moved into freelancing, working for GoAuto, The West Australian, Western 4WDriver magazine, Bauer Media and as an online content writer for one of Australia’s biggest car groups. He has involved himself in all aspects including motorsport where he has competed in everything from motocross to motorkhanas and rallies including Targa West and the ARC Forest Rally. He loves all facets of the car industry, from design, manufacture, testing, marketing and even business structures and believes cars are one of the few high-volume consumables to combine a very high degree of engineering enlivened with an even higher degree of emotion from its consumers.
About Author
Disclaimer: The pricing information shown in the editorial content (Review Prices) is to be used as a guide only and is based on information provided to Carsguide Autotrader Media Solutions Pty Ltd (Carsguide) both by third party sources and the car manufacturer at the time of publication. The Review Prices were correct at the time of publication. Carsguide does not warrant or represent that the information is accurate, reliable, complete, current or suitable for any particular purpose. You should not use or rely upon this information without conducting an independent assessment and valuation of the vehicle.
Pricing Guide
$2,000
Lowest price, based on CarsGuide listings over the last 6 months.
For more information on
2009 Volvo XC60
See Pricing & Specs

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