Skip to main content

Mitsubishi ASX 4 1.8

So the Mitsubishi ASX is one of those jumped-up supermini crossover jobs?

Bang on. Its dimensions conform to the compact norm for this class and it’s priced from £14,999 to £23,899 (£22,499 for the 1.8-litre diesel with a manual gearbox as tested). Given the most divisive-looking machine in this segment, the Nissan Juke, starts much lower down the price ladder, at £13,195, the dull-looking ASX is already on the back foot.

For the same outlay as your test car, you could bag a new Nissan Qashqai 1.6 DCI, albeit without our ASX’s all-wheel drive.

It’s far from the funkiest little car in its class. Cars like these, if the popular Juke and Clio-overshadowing Captur are anything to go buy, sell on trendy looks. Small wonder Vauxhall predicts its Mokka crossover will be its third-best-selling model in 2014. These family-friendly fashion accessories need to stand out in a crowded marketplace – and the ASX doesn’t. Forget turning around to study it after a journey – you’ll struggle to spot it in the car park at all.

Still, if it drives more like a car than an out-and-outdoor 4x4, plain-Jane styling needn’t be the ASX’s downfall.

Is the ASX more refined than the rest of Mitsubishi’s range?

We tested the 1.8-litre diesel variant, in range-topping ‘ASX 4’ trim. The powerplant is good for a healthy 221lb ft, 114bhp, and 54.3mpg. It’s a torque-rich motor, and good thing too, because things get awfully raucous as the revs climb. Meanwhile, the wind gusts around the A-pillars like a Hollywood horror movie sound effect.

Inside, the ASX isn’t any livelier than it is outside. The aftermarket infotainment, plonked into a glossy slab of plastic in the middle of the dashboard, is the visual highlight, but certainly not a user-friendly one. CAR’s Damion Smy likened its unintuitive interface to that of his Subaru BRZ long-termer’s swearword-inducing infotainment – far from a compliment, take it from us. In typical Mitsubishi fashion, all the switchgear and surfaces are catered towards longevity rather than stroke-ability, and this flagship ASX ‘4’ certainly crams in the kit.

With heated seats, a reversing camera, and a panoramic glass roof, there’s plenty to keep you entertained in the absence of any fun driving dynamics.

Want to know the ASX’s most eye-popping feature? Easy – the LED mood lighting strips that run along the inside of the roof rails. Open the roof blind after dark and the cabin is bathed in an orange glow, whole the roof rails look like the illuminated outline of an airport runway from the cockpit of an approaching jet.

It’s an odd touch, but we quite like it. That glass roof certainly adds an impression of spaciousness rearward…

Is the ASX a bit cramped?

Certainly not up front, where decent headroom is teamed with a raised driving position, and there’s a commendable amount of seat adjustment and overall visibility. However, though the boxy profile aids rear headroom, legroom is just as pinched as it is in the Nissan Juke.

Open the light tailgate (praise be, it’s not as flimsy feeling as the rear doors) and 442/1193 litres of storage space is up for grabs. Enough to embarrass a few family hatches – Ford Focus, must try harder!

Will I be taking my ASX the long way home?

Nope – this isn’t the driver’s car in the class. Though the slab-sided body has been tuned to not roll about like Mitsubishi’s more rugged 4x4s, the ASX lacks engagement and chuckability. There’s grip from the all-wheel drive system – which switches between two- and four-wheel drive at the touch of a button – and understeer thereafter. It rides decently enough, but isn’t memorably compliant, nor does it boast a gearchange you’ll be telling your mates about down the pub.

Things are better in the ASX’s intended environment: town centres. There, the light, disconnected-feeling steering is handy for manoeuvring and the low-down grunt from the diesel motor a real boon in blink-and-you’ll-miss-green traffic-light cycles.

Verdict

Though the ASX is a competent machine (and probably the best car in Mitsubishi’s current range), it desperately struggles to stand out in a very crowded, talented class. Fact is, unless you’re really sold on the ASX’s looks (and we mean really sold), or its workmanlike hard-wearing character, you’re not short of far more desirable rivals to plump for instead.

Popular posts from this blog

Porsche 913

Forgetting the Panamera, Cayenne and Macan, Porsche offer a pretty well-rounded sports car range. Starting with the Boxster and Cayman, and moving up the multitude of variations of the Porsche 911, all the way up to the 918 Spyder supercar. But there is a HUGE price gap between the top of the range 911 Turbo ($250,000 will all the options ticked), to the 918 Spyder ($800,000). Somewhere in that range Porsche could surely offer something to compete with the likes of Ferrari and Lamborghini. Something like the 913 possibly? Conceived by the fertile mind of Rene Garcia, a professional 3D modeller who has created conceptual vehicles and highly detailed models for some of the biggest movies of the past decade, including the Matrix Trilogy, Transformers, the latest Star Trekthrillers and The Avengers, the Porsche 913 is an exquisitely rendered design in every detail. It has a bit of the 918 Spyder about it, but there’s also a lot of originality to the design. It looks like a Porsche, but a

Lamborghini Canto – What the Murcielago could have been?

Back in the late 1990s, when Lamborghini were starting to realise they needed a replacement for the ageing Diablo, they started reviewing design proposals from various automotive design firms. Zagato’s offering was the Zagato L147 SuperDiablo, or as it was to be later known, the Lamborghini Canto. The Lamborghini Canto first appeared in 1998, it arrived only two years after another Zagato designed Lamborghini concept had been unveiled, the Diablo-based Raptor. The cars shared a number of similar features, including the wraparound windows, triangular lateral air intakes, and trademark double-bubble roof. However of the two, the earlier Raptor was probably the better looking. Clearly Ferdinand Piech – head of the Volkswagen Group – thought so too. After VW bought Lamborghini in 1999, one of his first decisions was to review the Canto’s development and redesign the concept. The car was re-engineered and the rear extensively restyled to include smaller air intakes. The engine was also up

BMW GINA

The BMW GINA changes the design rulebook concept which features clever use of materials and technology. The GINA acronym stands for 'Geometry In "N" Adaptions'. The 'N' stands for infinite. Quite logical really... While at first glance the BMW GINA appears to be nothing more than a modified and stretched BMW Z4. As soon as the doors are opened it reveals its true nature. Covering the lightweight spaceframe of the BMW GINA are not conventional metal bodypanels, but instead an elastic, rubber-like material is stretched across the structural members and wire frame to form an attractive design which follows BMW's flame surfacing styling philosophy. This elastic material has given BMW's designers more options when designing various moving parts of the GINA concept. The doors for example have no shut line along their front edge as the material just moves with the door. At the rear the electro-hydraulic adjustable spoiler rises and lowers under the skin of